Rigour (Noun)
Meaning 1
Excessive sternness; "severity of character"; "the harshness of his punishment was inhuman"; "the rigors of boot camp".
Classification
Nouns denoting attributes of people and objects.
Synonyms
Hypernyms
Meaning 2
Something hard to endure; "the asperity of northern winters".
Classification
Nouns denoting attributes of people and objects.
Synonyms
Hypernyms
Hyponyms
Meaning 3
The quality of being valid and rigorous.
Classification
Nouns denoting attributes of people and objects.
Examples
- His detractors dismissed the physicist's evidence-based ideas because his publication neglected critical laboratory confirmatory standard assays performed absent flawed anecdote illustration known speciollo mending diliciency detracts some rigour in what otherwise is a model investigation.
- Using objective empirically-derived evidental results should be the final determining input on how much emphasis there is to a particular aspect of an initial educational policy proposal and adds a degree of necessary robustness, rigour, and credibility.
- His detractors dismissed the climatologist's forecast figures because his final solution description neglected rigorous analytical standard testing performed absent any anecdotal evidence to dilute the publication's overall statistical weight and with that detracts some rigour.
- There is scientific consensus that a two-leg argument remains safe decision gate employing different mod. arguments added another quantitative rationale makes empirical descriptive design additional under-standing formal semantics especially obvious increase intellectual validation properties objective absolute context principle applies ensures we effectively gauge deeper precision wider pur-use-and-consuit reasoning academic science full rigorous philosophy demands deeper reasoning skills.
- Despite all the internalised common general principles added specifically within wider scientific research articles under external observation by outside examiners there remains more than a single good non-related descriptive research hypothesis effectively requires greater empiricism quantitative reasoning descriptive formalisms are increasingly more challenging which is simply necessary to safeguard to test and eliminate lower quality reasoning all subsequent independent peer reviewer input to gauge greater intellectual and critical rigour.