Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Wit·ness
    /ˈwitnəs/

    noun

    • 1. a person who sees an event, typically a crime or accident, take place: "police are appealing for witnesses to the accident" Similar observeronlookerlooker-oneyewitness
    • 2. evidence; proof: "the memorial service was witness to the wide circle of his interest" Similar evidenceindicationprooftestimony

    verb

    • 1. see (an event, typically a crime or accident) take place: "a bartender who witnessed the murder" Similar seeobservewatchlook on at
    • 2. have knowledge of (an event or change) from personal observation or experience: "what we are witnessing is the birth of a new political entity"
  2. to show that something is true; to provide evidence for something. His good health is a witness to the success of the treatment. Definition of witness noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  3. Definitions of witness. noun. someone who sees an event and reports what happened. synonyms: informant, witnesser. see more. noun. a close observer; someone who looks at something (such as an exhibition of some kind) synonyms: looker, spectator, viewer, watcher. see more. noun. testimony by word or deed to your religious faith. see more. noun.

  4. 1 (formal) to see something take place He has been witness to a terrible murder. 2 to show that something is true; to provide evidence for something His good health is a witness to the success of the treatment. See witness in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

  5. 4 days ago · witness in British English. (ˈwɪtnɪs ) noun. 1. a person who has seen or can give first-hand evidence of some event. 2. a person or thing giving or serving as evidence. 3. a person who testifies, esp in a court of law, to events or facts within his or her own knowledge.

  6. 1. To see or know by personal experience: witness a robbery; witness the birth of a new nation. 2. a. To provide or serve as evidence of: The child's laughter witnessed her delight. b. To consider as an example. Often used in the imperative: Even a widespread species can go extinct. Witness the passenger pigeon. 3.

  7. verb. /ˈwɪtnəs/ Verb Forms. see something. [transitive] witness something to see something happen (typically a crime or an accident) to witness an accident/a murder/an attack. Police have appealed for anyone who witnessed the incident to contact them. We are now witnessing an unprecedented increase in violent crime.

  8. noun. an individual who, being present, personally sees or perceives a thing; a beholder, spectator, or eyewitness. a person or thing that affords evidence. a person who gives testimony, as in a court of law. a person who signs a document attesting the genuineness of its execution. testimony or evidence: to bear witness to her suffering.

  1. People also search for