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conviction
[kuhn-vik-shuhn]
noun
a fixed or firm belief.
No clever argument, no persuasive fact or theory could make a dent in his conviction in the rightness of his position.
the act of convicting someone, as in a court of law; a declaration that a person is guilty of an offense.
the state of being convicted.
the act of convincing a person by argument or evidence.
the state of being convinced.
Antonyms: uncertainty, doubt
conviction
/ kənˈvɪkʃən /
noun
the state or appearance of being convinced
a fixed or firmly held belief, opinion, etc
the act of convincing
the act or an instance of convicting or the state of being convicted
to be convincing
Other Word Forms
- convictional adjective
- nonconviction noun
- preconviction noun
- proconviction adjective
- reconviction noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of conviction1
Idioms and Phrases
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The administration touted going after “the worst of the worst,” but an analysis from The Times showed that the majority of those arrested had no criminal conviction.
Another protester, Erica, said the trial was "just a big theatre because everyone knows his conviction is already determined".
Erin Patterson now has until midnight on 6 October to appeal against her conviction or sentence.
A trail of blood and broken acrylic nails helped solve a grisly Ventura County murder, authorities say — culminating Friday in the conviction of a couple for beating and murdering the man’s ex-girlfriend.
Protests have been staged outside The Bell Hotel, where he was being housed, since Kebatu's arrest and subsequent conviction on Thursday of five offences.
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