I can attest to the excellence of this shampoo.
The word attest means to support, or back someone up. The following sentence uses the word attest. His parents can attest to the fact that his grades began to suffer once he started playing video games.
Unfortunately for the plaintiff, three independent witnesses were able to attest that he deliberately jumped in front of the defendant's vehicle.
The future tense of "attest" is "will attest."
I have this sentence in my resume and would like to know if it is written correctly. "These career experiences attest to my being accomplished in the areas that are required to perform in the Program/Project Management position and can only allow for my smooth transition."or " These career experiences attests to me beingaccomplished in the areas that are required to perform in the Program/Project Management position and can only allow for a smooth transition." Thank you. Lisa Nuzzi Itsnuzzi@aol.com
All gazetted officers can attest ! !
That is the correct spelling of "attest" (to swear or affirm).
no... no one can attest the documents of his\her son\daughter
yeah ofcourse. like "did you attest his mum cause shes rly attestable
Yes, there is a difference between "attest" and "witness." "Attest" typically refers to formally affirming something while "witness" usually refers to observing an event or transaction and providing testimony about it. In legal contexts, a witness can attest to what they observed.
synonyms
Verify, attest.