Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "accepted evidence" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you refer to evidence that is recognized or acknowledged as valid or credible within a particular field or discussion.
Example: "In the court of law, only accepted evidence can be presented to support a case."
Alternatives: "recognized evidence" or "validated evidence".
Exact(43)
1. Direct contradiction of key claims by much available and generally accepted evidence.
But there is little academically accepted evidence of a causal relationship.
Apparently, women's genetic information has been geographically dispersed more widely than men's -- contradicting the accepted evidence that men traveled more.
There is powerful, widely accepted evidence that working memory plays an important role in everything from reading ability and problem-solving to reasoning and learning new skills.
The oldest generally accepted evidence for living cells are fossil bacteria 1.9 billion years old from the Gunflint Formation of Ontario.
In fact, there has never been widely accepted evidence that vitamin D is helpful in preventing or treating any of those conditions.
Similar(17)
Although widely accepted evidence-based guidelines for asthma management exist, unnecessary variation in patient care remains.
The globalization of medical practice using accepted evidence-based approaches is matched by a growing trend for shared curricula in medicine and other health professions across international boundaries.
Cara Anselmo New York City It is one thing for doctors to innovate or operate outside accepted, evidence-based practice when they assume responsibility for their patients' outcomes, but it is quite another when Mehmet Oz — "America's doctor" — seems to promise people miracle cures that do not pan out ("The Operator," by Michael Specter, February 4th).
It is one thing for doctors to innovate or operate outside accepted, evidence-based practice when they assume responsibility for their patients' outcomes, but it is quite another when Mehmet Oz — "America's doctor" — seems to promise people miracle cures that do not pan out ("The Operator," by Michael Specter, February 4th).
But many others not only hold that the attempted proofs all require premises that a disbeliever is under no rational obligation to accept but also question the evidentialist assumption that the only route to rational theistic belief is by inference from previously accepted evidence-stating premises.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com