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  1. What does the verb testify mean? There are seven meanings listed in OED's entry for the verb testify . See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  2. [transitive] testify (that)… (formal) to say that you believe something is true because you have evidence of it. Too many young people are unable to write or spell well, as employers will testify.

  3. verb [ I or T ] uk / ˈtes.tɪ.faɪ / us / ˈtes.tə.faɪ /. Add to word list. C2 [ I or T ] (of a person) to speak seriously about something, especially in a law court, or to give or provide proof: [ + that ] He testified that he had seen the man leaving the building around the time of the murder.

  4. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › testifytestify — Wordorigins.org

    May 7, 2022 · Testify is a word with a straightforward etymology but one with a myth attached. The verb is a late fourteenth-century borrowing from the medieval Latin testificare, a later variant on the classical testificor.

  5. British English: testify VERB / ˈtɛstɪfaɪ / When someone testifies in a court of law, they give a statement, after promising to tell the truth. Several eyewitnesses testified that they saw the car in the area.

  6. Detailed meaning of testify. To testify means to give a formal account of something that you have seen, heard, or experienced, typically under oath or affirmation to tell the truth, and in front of a judge, a jury, or other authorized person.

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  8. Definitions of 'testify'. 1. When someone testifies in a court of law, they give a statement of what they saw someone do or what they know of a situation, after having promised to tell the truth. [...] 2. If one thing testifies to another, it supports the belief that the second thing is true. [formal] [...]

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