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documents
doc·u·ment D0316400 (dŏk′yə-mənt)n.1. a. A written or printed paper that bears the original, official, or legal form of something and can be used to furnish decisive evidence or information.b. Something, such as a recording or a photograph, that can be used to furnish evidence or information.c. A writing that contains information.d. Computers A piece of work created with an application, as with a word processor.e. Computers A computer file that is not an executable file and contains data for use by applications.2. Something, especially a material substance such as a coin bearing a revealing symbol or mark, that serves as proof or evidence.tr.v. (-mĕnt′) doc·u·ment·ed, doc·u·ment·ing, doc·u·ments 1. To furnish with a document or documents.2. To methodically record the details of: "I had thought long and logically about ... how to document the patterns of dolphin behavior" (Diana Reiss).3. To support (an assertion or claim, for example) with evidence or decisive information.4. To support (statements in a book, for example) with written references or citations; annotate. [Middle English, precept, from Old French, from Latin documentum, example, proof, from docēre, to teach; see dek- in Indo-European roots.] doc′u·ment′a·ble (-mĕn′tə-bəl) adj.doc′u·ment′al (-mĕn′tl) adj.doc′u·ment′er n.Translations- Here are my vehicle documents → 这是我的汽车资料
EncyclopediaSeedocumentDocuments
DOCUMENTS, evidence. The deeds, agreements, title papers, letters, receipts, and other written instruments used to prove a fact. Among the civilians, by documents is also understood evidence delivered in the forms established by law, of whatever nature such evidence may be, but applied principally to the testimony of witnesses. Savig. Dr. Rom. Sec. 165. 2. Public documents are all such records, papers and acts, as are filed in the public offices of the United States or of the several states; as, for example, public statutes, public proclamations, resolutions of the legislature, the journals of either branch of the legislature, diplomatic correspondence communicated by the president to congress, and the like. These are in general evidence of the facts they contain or recite. 1 Greenl. Sec. 491. See DOCS See DOCS |