Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Firm belief ", 10 letters:
conviction

Alternative clues for the word conviction

Word definitions for conviction in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a passionate belief/conviction ▪ We had a passionate belief in what we were doing. compromise your beliefs/convictions/ideals ▪ Anti-war activists were put in prison for refusing to compromise their beliefs. firm conviction/commitment/belief ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Conviction is an upcoming American legal drama television series on ABC . Its premiere is scheduled for Monday, October 3, 2016, at 10pm/9c. The series, starring Hayley Atwell , was picked up from pilot on May 12, 2016. A full trailer was released on May ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context countable English) A firmly held belief. 2 (context countable English) A judgement of guilt in a court of law.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mid-15c., "the proving of guilt," from Late Latin convictionem (nominative convictio ) "proof, refutation," noun of action from past participle stem of convincere (see convince ). Meaning "mental state of being convinced" is from 1690s; that of "firm belief, ...

Usage examples of conviction.

It was then that there dawned upon him the possibility of the success of a different course which would still leave him in possession of the jewels, while at the same time satisfying the greed of the Abyssinian with the conviction that he had obtained all that Werper had to offer.

Suppose that any cool and cynical art-critic, any art-critic fully impressed with the conviction that artists were greatest when they were most purely artistic, suppose that a man who professed ably a humane aestheticism, as did Mr.

Separatists and Albertan ultra-rightists united only in their fanatical conviction that the U.

It was his firm conviction that the flight to Amritsar, which the Colonel had advised in case of a defeat, was, under the present circumstances, quite impracticable.

The complete development of church apologetics, as well as the conviction that Christianity is identical with correct and absolute knowledge.

Johns, by nature as well as by education, was disposed to look distrustfully upon any sudden conviction of duty which had its spring in any extraordinary exaltation of feeling, rather than in that full intellectual seizure of the Divine Word, which it seemed to him could come only after a determined wrestling with those dogmas that to his mind were the aptest and compactest expression of the truth toward which we must agonize.

Kelric wanted to believe his brother was in the custody of the Allied Worlds, but his hope fought with his conviction that the Aristos would never trade their Ruby psion.

Here is a theatre for great dramas, wanting only the tragedian, The outlawed Sheikh of the Bishareen knew this full well, but, unlike others who know it, he had acted upon his convictions and revealed to wondering Egypt what Bedouin craft and a band of intrepid horsemen can do, aided by a belt of sand, and cloaked by night.

I was relieved to find our journey ending, as I felt an increasing distrust of Eleanor, and a growing conviction that if she could injure me with Juan Cordova, she would.

Defense Secretary was a quiet but inpressive man, exuding a sort of iron conviction Kingsley had seldom seen, for a pointed counterexample, in the English cabinet.

Court upset a conviction for perjury in the district courts of one who had denied under oath before a House Committee any affiliation with Communism.

General Court voted in October that the conviction and attainders of George Burroughs, John Proctor, George Jacobs, John Willard, Giles Corey, Martha Corey, Rebecca Nurse, Sarah Good, Elizabeth How, Mary Easty, Sarah Wildes, Abigail Hobbs, Samuel Wardwell, Mary Parker, Martha Carrier, Abigail Faulkner, Anne Foster, Rebecca Eames, Mary Post, Mary Lacey, Mary Bradbury, and Dorcas Hoar be reversed.

This fault is very incident to the scholarly style, which often sacrifices emphasis and conviction to a futile air of encyclopaedic grandeur.

The following placard was posted throughout the goldfields:- 500 POUNDS REWARD for the discovery, apprehension and conviction of the murderer of James Scobie, found dead near the late Eureka Hotel, etc.

And in every heart reigned the falsest of despairing convictions, that this was the only reality, and that was but a dream.