0 information that you have heard but do not know to be true:
The evidence against them is all hearsay.
1 information you have heard that might or might not be true:
In addition, their reliability is doubtful since the newspaper admitted that they were based on hearsay.
Far-reaching consequences have been ascribed to a policy decision that remains undocumented except for hearsay evidence in the popular conversation that surrounded the trials.
Rather, the rumours of bloodsuckers indicate a flexible ' truth ' that is negotiated through talking, since hearsay is a kind of truth when people believe it.
This in turn means that the admissibility of hearsay for the government must be strictly limited (189).
Rather, they only "heard some news" - a hearsay experience.
Some of the testimony may simply have constituted hearsay or slander.
Data were elicited through production questionnaires in which the learners were instructed to verbally convey hearsay information to specified addressees.
Almost all the evidence that was gleaned was hearsay.