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Affirmation   /ˌæfərmˈeɪʃən/   Listen
Affirmation

noun
1.
A statement asserting the existence or the truth of something.  Synonyms: avouchment, avowal.
2.
The act of affirming or asserting or stating something.  Synonyms: assertion, statement.
3.
(religion) a solemn declaration that serves the same purpose as an oath (if an oath is objectionable to the person on religious or ethical grounds).
4.
A judgment by a higher court that the judgment of a lower court was correct and should stand.



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"Affirmation" Quotes from Famous Books



... well aware of the verdict of the jury, and the affirmation of the Court of Appeal, upon those dear children. The decree orders them to be sold in the market, for the benefit of my uncle's creditors: this is the day, the fatal day, the sale takes place. Let me beseech of you, as you have it in your power, to induce the deacon to purchase ...
— Our World, or, The Slaveholders Daughter • F. Colburn Adams

... hand to his lips and shook his head in negation—then pointed to the sun and the tree, and shook his head again—then once more to the sun and slowly upward to the top of the tree, and nodded in affirmation. ...
— Beatrix of Clare • John Reed Scott

... therefore, was a stern, lofty, disdainful protest against the most dangerous and demoralizing evil of the Empire. It hurled scorn, hatred, and defiance on this overwhelming evil, and invoked the aid of Christianity. It was simply the earnest affirmation and belief that money could not buy the higher joys of earth, and might jeopardize the hopes of heaven. It called to mind the greatest examples; it showed that the great teachers of mankind, the sages and prophets of history, had ...
— Beacon Lights of History, Volume V • John Lord

... dialectical use, by the intellect, of negation as a mode of passage towards a higher kind of affirmation, there is correlated the subtlest of moral counterparts in the sphere of the personal will. Since denial of the finite self and its wants, since asceticism of some sort, is found in religious experience to be the only doorway ...
— The Varieties of Religious Experience • William James

... great believer in the Socratic method. He feels that a question is its own excuse for being. The proper answer to a question is not a stupid affirmation that would close the conversation, but another question. The questions follow one another with extreme rapidity. He acts upon my mind like an air pump. His questions speedily exhaust my small stock of acquired information. Into the mental vacuum thus produced ...
— By the Christmas Fire • Samuel McChord Crothers


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