ppl. a. [f. as prec. + -ING2.] That evinces; † convincing.
1641. Milton, Animadv. (1851), 192. The inference is undeniable from the general to the particular, an evincing argument in Logick.
1673. Ladies Call., I. § 1. 28. The more evincing attestation they must attend from the unerring Tribunal hereafter.
1759. Dilworth, Pope, 65. He thought the arguments there offered so evincing.
1794. G. Adams, Nat. & Exp. Philos., II. xxi. 423. [He] will feel the evidence of the hereditary evil of man evincing.
Hence † Evincingly adv., in an evincing manner; convincingly.
1656. H. More, Antid. Ath., II. ii. (1712), 43. That the foregoing Phænomena are not by chance or luck will be more evincingly confirmed.
1664. Power, Exp. Philos., II. 107. By which it most evincingly appears that water does gravitate in its own Sphære.