Facia in a sentence as a noun

OK, you have prima facia case that some problems won't be problems anymore.

When I first started doing volunteer health assessments and triage at our local homeless shelter, I inquired if facial hair was an issue with PPE.

A registered TM is prima facia evidence of an enforceable TM and ownership;2.

That label is more useful on easier-to-evaluate actions like prima facia deception.

I also read the history of science obfuscation paid for by companies facing new, legal liability, btw. I don't mean to suggest "ignore science" .. I mean to say "I think I will announce prima facia suspicion and get on with other tasks now"

I would regard it as prima facia deeply unlikely that processing wood into paper is carbon-negative, regardless of how long you then store the paper.

Instead of vapidly speculating that "someone" is making a large profit because, prima facia, costs are increasing, take a look at the improvements in education since the first half of last century.

Anyway, your consequent doesn't follow: an inability to know the concrete answer to any given question does not make the question dishonest.> which, I think, is rather prima facia a very important question to answerImportant for what purpose?

>because they believe financially supporting Proposition 8 is prima facia evidence of homophobiaAnd they're wrong.>without actually having any knowledge of Brendan's beliefsI'm going on Mozilla employee's reactions, people who actually interact with him on a day to day basis.

That you view this as prime facia evidence that the taxi market is dysfunctional and that Uber should be able to selectively siphon off a portion of the demand without abiding the rest of the government-regulated taxi requirements is consistent internally, but I believe misses some of the underlying public good that the current taxi system provides.

Facia definitions

noun

a sheet or band of fibrous connective tissue separating or binding together muscles and organs etc

See also: fascia