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Certainty   /sˈərtənti/   Listen
Certainty

noun
(pl. certainties)
1.
The state of being certain.  Antonym: uncertainty.
2.
Something that is certain.  Synonyms: foregone conclusion, sure thing.  Antonym: uncertainty.



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"Certainty" Quotes from Famous Books



... During those seven years, what she did, what she was accused of doing, what she was expected to do, what she intended to do, formed the subject of the keenest interest and anxiety in England at the time; and the problems and mysteries of those years, never unravelled to this day, never with any certainty to be unravelled at all, continued to perplex English statesmen and to complicate the situation in England for nearly nineteen years more. We shall have to follow them therefore in much greater detail than would a priori seem ...
— England Under the Tudors • Arthur D. Innes

... certainty the descent of animal forms, a descent which we can follow in all its details. In certain ants whose bodies show their close relationship with a slave-keeping group, but which have become the parasitic hosts of other ...
— The Sexual Question - A Scientific, psychological, hygienic and sociological study • August Forel

... man had fallen there in the service of Christ, and that he would take rank in the glorious Army of the Martyrs. I made for him a coffin, and dug his grave near the Mission House. With prayers, and many tears, we consigned his remains to the dust in the certainty of a happy resurrection. Even one such convert was surely a triumphant reward for the Missionaries, whom God had honored in bringing him to Jesus. May they have many like Namuri for their crown of joy and rejoicing in the ...
— The Story of John G. Paton - Or Thirty Years Among South Sea Cannibals • James Paton

... conceptions, suddenly grow full of zest, a fact with which all teachers are familiar. And, both in its sensible and in its rational developments, disinterested curiosity may be successfully appealed to in the child with much more certainty than in the adult, in whom this intellectual instinct has grown so torpid as usually never to awake unless it enters into association with some selfish personal interest. Of this latter point I will ...
— Talks To Teachers On Psychology; And To Students On Some Of Life's Ideals • William James

... breakfast together, after which we went out into the world of light, groping our way along through the dark passages amid the busy crowd. Almah could see better than I in the darkness; but she was far from seeing well, and did not move with that easy step and perfect certainty which all the others showed. Like me, she was a child of light, and the darkness was distressing to her. As we went on we were seen by all, but were apparently not considered prisoners. On the contrary, all looked at us with the deepest respect, and bowed low or moved aside, ...
— A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder • James De Mille


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