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Meanings of acknowledged fact in English
We have no meanings for "acknowledged fact" in our records yet.
Usage of acknowledged fact in English
1
He would not have her even suppose it an acknowledgedfact!
2
This is pretty much a universally acknowledgedfact by now.
3
This was first taken for granted, and then spoken of as an acknowledgedfact.
4
The diminution of crime is an acknowledgedfact.
5
For it was now an acknowledgedfact at Kingcombe Holm that the Squire was growing very fond of Agatha.
6
I felt, what since then has become an acknowledgedfact, that travelling would be the best school for me.
7
This is an acknowledgedfact.
8
Indeed, to start with the acknowledgedfact of personal election sometimes gives a man like John Bairdieson an unmistakable advantage.
9
Whenever you are about to utter something astonishingly false, always begin with, "It is an acknowledgedfact," etc.
10
It is perhaps a burlesque of an acknowledgedfact, to record that Whitfield could thrill an audience by saying 'Mesopotamia!'
11
It was a well- acknowledgedfact that no one could be so lucky as to buy live crabs at a state-run market.
12
The Zu-Zu is an openly acknowledgedfact, moreover, daily becoming more prominent in the world, more brilliant, more frankly recognized, and more omnipotent.
13
And, lastly, from the acknowledgedfact of subterraneous fire as a cause, to reason with regard to the effects of that power in mineral bodies.
14
To be in love, as an absolute, well-marked, acknowledgedfact, is the condition of a woman more frequently and more readily than of a man.
15
It used to be considered an acknowledgedfact, that for a pauper's shilling, if they brought a shilling to the shop, they would get 14d.
16
"Guy comes first," he suggested, in the casual voice of one stating an acknowledgedfact.