ppl. a. [f. as prec. + -ING2.] That evinces; † convincing.

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1641.  Milton, Animadv. (1851), 192. The inference is undeniable … from the general to the particular, an evincing argument in Logick.

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1673.  Ladies Call., I. § 1. 28. The more evincing attestation they must attend from the unerring Tribunal hereafter.

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1759.  Dilworth, Pope, 65. He thought the arguments there offered so evincing.

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1794.  G. Adams, Nat. & Exp. Philos., II. xxi. 423. [He] will feel the evidence of the hereditary evil of man … evincing.

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  Hence † Evincingly adv., in an evincing manner; convincingly.

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1656.  H. More, Antid. Ath., II. ii. (1712), 43. That the foregoing Phænomena are not by chance or luck … will be more evincingly confirmed.

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1664.  Power, Exp. Philos., II. 107. By which it most evincingly appears that water does gravitate in its own Sphære.

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