Substantiate in a sentence as a verb

Horvath's response: "[My claims] are now, more or less, substantiated.

The only way to substantiate it is to see if they have made investments in similar industries.

In what way do the incidents substantiate a conspiracy?

The indictment asserts that Mr. Swartz intended to distribute the files downloaded but did not substantiate this claim.

That's pure speculation on your part, which is completely unsubstantiated, and we'll have to wait one or two decades to find out.

You substantiate your claims with good math and statistics, and transparent methodologies.

This headline seems a bit hyperbolic; the article does not actually substantiate the part about Schumer going after Bitcoin.

The fate of our company and\n its team depends on the success of this game.\n\nWell, of course, but that doesn't do anything to substantiate why they should trust the project owners.

In cryptography, the expectation is that the person presenting the algorithm should substantiate their claims, preferably with a proof.

But I am utterly unconvinced by Melissa Gates saying that "saving lives leads to overpopulation" is a myth -- she doesn't substantiate it, and it seems like the weakest part of the whole post.

In science - especially health science - it is not the responsibility of the skeptic to prove that a particular theory is wrong, rather it is the responsibility of the person making such claims to substantiate them.

We can always hope though.- ps apologies for lack of sources, I'm on mobile, I'm a doctor working on an oncology ward and I just had my worst day in my 5 month long career today and hardly in the mood to do the research legwork required to substantiate my claims.

Bezos was frustrated Bezos was consumed In the circuitry of Bezoss brain, something flipped When reading phrases like these, which are used in the book routinely, readers should remember that Jeff was never interviewed for this book, and should also take note of how seldom these guesses about his feelings and motives are marked with a footnote indicating there is any other source to substantiate them.

There's a nice explanation by bunderbunder in a previous discussion too:> Interestingly, if you go back and look through the Wikipedia page's history, you can see what appears to be exactly that process happening.> Before the Wired article, the Wiki article implies that the site was an operating Magic card exchange, but the citation is a link to the Internet Archive's copy of the stub page, with absolutely nothing there to substantiate the idea that it was actually an online exchange.

Substantiate definitions

verb

establish or strengthen as with new evidence or facts; "his story confirmed my doubts"; "The evidence supports the defendant"

See also: confirm corroborate sustain support affirm

verb

represent in bodily form; "He embodies all that is evil wrong with the system"; "The painting substantiates the feelings of the artist"

See also: incarnate embody

verb

make real or concrete; give reality or substance to; "our ideas must be substantiated into actions"

See also: realize realise actualize actualise

verb

solidify, firm, or strengthen; "The president's trip will substantiate good relations with the former enemy country"