What is another word for to a certainty?

Pronunciation: [tʊ ɐ sˈɜːtənti] (IPA)

To a certainty refers to a state of absolute certainty or complete assurance. However, there are several synonyms that could replace this phrase in different contexts. Some commonly used synonyms include 'beyond a doubt,' which implies a level of conviction that cannot be easily shaken; 'undeniably,' which means something is beyond question; 'indubitably,' suggesting evidence that is conclusive; 'surely,' indicating one is confident about the matter at hand; 'without a doubt,' implying unquestionable evidence, among others. These synonyms represent different levels of confidence and certainty, allowing you to choose the one that best matches the intended meaning or tone of your statement.

What are the hypernyms for To a certainty?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with To a certainty

  • If a man fights his way through his doubts to the conviction that Jesus Christ is Lord, he has attained to a certainty that the man who unthinkingly accepts things can never reach.
    William Barclay
  • At the same time we had best try, as innocently as may be, to realise that no final judgement has yet been pronounced, either by the Church or by Society or by Science, on either or any of these points; and until mankind finally settles to a certainty where it means to go, or whether it means to go anywhere,— what its object is, or whether it has an object,— Saint Francis may still prove to have been its ultimate expression. In that case, his famous Chant,— the Cantico del Sole,— will be the last word of religion, as it was probably its first.
    Henry Adams
  • For it needs little skill in psychology to be sure that a highly gifted girl who had tried to use her gift for poetry would have been so thwarted and hindered by other people, so tortured and pulled asunder by her own contrary instincts, that she must have lost her health and sanity to a certainty.
    Virginia Woolf

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