Definitions

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Etymologies

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Examples

  • Dubiety: A proposition, p, may be possible (not necessarily false), necessary (not possibly false), contingent (neither necessarily false nor necessarily true), or dubious (not necessarily true).

    Archive 2007-04-01 Hal Duncan 2007

  • Dubiety: A proposition, p, may be possible (not necessarily false), necessary (not possibly false), contingent (neither necessarily false nor necessarily true), or dubious (not necessarily true).

    A Response to a Response Hal Duncan 2007

  • Dubiety is a poem of the Indian Summer, but it has the beauty, with a touch of the pathos, proper to the time.

    Robert Browning Dowden, Edward 1904

  • Dubiety of St. George's tells me that I have been a signal sinner, and bids me, now, to repent of my evil ways.

    The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous, Vol. 1 of 3 Who was a sailor, a soldier, a merchant, a spy, a slave among the moors... George Augustus Sala 1861

  • As to the bibliopolic Accounts, my Friend! we will trust them, with a faith known only in the purer ages of Roman Catholicism, -- when Papacy had indeed become a Dubiety, but was not yet a

    The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol. I Thomas Carlyle 1838

  • Dubiety, however, was nowhere near prevalent as Sevilla effectively killed the contest.

    The Guardian World News 2009

  • We've been waiting for the Word For The Day to come under the aegis of secret garden. secret garden (Dubiety reigns here)

    Latest Articles 2009

  • Dear hubby showed no velleity whatsoever when I informed him I would be packing PB&Js for our lunches today instead of the planned ham and cheese subs ......... secret garden (Dubiety reigns here)

    Latest Articles 2009

  • It speaks so well to the issue. secret garden (Dubiety reigns here)

    Latest Articles 2008

  • As to the bibliopolic Accounts, my Friend! we will trust them, with a faith known only in the purer ages of Roman Catholicism, ” when Papacy had indeed become a Dubiety, but was not yet a Quackery and Falsehood, was a thing as true as it could manage to be!

    The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol. I Carlyle, Thomas 1883

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