Validity
31validity — In its primary meaning it is arguments that are valid or invalid, according to whether the conclusion follows from the premises. Premises and conclusions themselves are not valid or invalid, but true or false. In model theory a formula is called… …
32validity — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. soundness, efficacy, gravity; see legality . II (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) n. 1. legality lawfulness, legitimacy, authority, sanction. 2. soundness solidity, correctness, accuracy, authenticity, genuineness. III (Roget s… …
33validity — va·lid·i·ty || vÉ™ lɪdÉ™tɪ n. state of being valid, legitimacy; soundness, condition of being well founded …
34validity — n. 1. Soundness, justness, efficacy, cogency, weight, strength, goodness, force, gravity, importance. 2. (Law.) Legal force or strength, quality of being good in law …
35validity — 1. The state of being relevant. *Audit evidence is valid only if it relates directly to the supporting or refuting of an *audit objective. 2. The state of being compliant with *regulations or the law …
36validity — n 1. effectiveness, effectivity, effectualness, effectuality, efficaciousness; potency, Literary. puissance, force, forcefulness, forcibleness, power, powerfulness, strength, vigor, vigorousness; substan tialness, substantiality, substantiveness …
37validity — va·lid·i·ty …
38validity — See: valid …
39validity — Законность …
40validity — va•lid•i•ty [[t]vəˈlɪd ɪ ti[/t]] n. 1) the state or quality of being valid 2) legal soundness or force • Etymology: 1540–50; < LL …