| Credibleness | n. The quality or state of being credible; worthiness of belief; credibility. [ R. ] Boyle. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Credible | a. [ L. credibilis, fr. credere. See Creed. ] Capable of being credited or believed; worthy of belief; entitled to confidence; trustworthy. [ 1913 Webster ] Things are made credible either by the known condition and quality of the utterer or by the manifest likelihood of truth in themselves. Hooker. [ 1913 Webster ] A very diligent and observing person, and likewise very sober and credible. Dampier. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| credible | (adj) น่าเชื่อถือ, Syn. believable, Ant. incredible |
| credible | A most credible hypothesis is the one that limits the number of elements in the domain T. |
| credible |
| credible |
| credible | (adj) capable of being believed, Syn. believable, Ant. incredible, Example: completely credible testimony; credible information |
| credible | (adj) (a common but incorrect usage where `credulous' would be appropriate) credulous, Example: she was not the...credible fool he expected |
| credible | (adj) appearing to merit belief or acceptance, Example: a credible witness |
| glaubwürdig; glaubhaft; zuverlässig { adj } | glaubwürdiger | am glaubwürdigsten | credible | more credible | most credible [Add to Longdo] |