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proved - Master This Word

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proved Word Meanings

  • to demonstrate the truth of something
  • to establish the validity of a claim
  • to show or confirm by evidence
Illustration for this word

proved Example Sentences

Example sentences are the start of understanding. Don't rush to memorize. First feel how the word works in a sentence.

proved Phonetic & Pronunciation

Pronunciation
UK /pruːv/
US /pruv/
Syllables
prove

proved Word Etymology

Root: pro- = forward, ve = to carry; Historical origin: Latin 'probare' → Old French 'prover' → English; Memory image: Imagine a courtroom where a lawyer forwardly carries evidence to prove a case.

Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.

Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.

Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible Input

English Brain Route

I move my attention to the edge of a claim, shift through details, and pull together clues in my mind. The pieces click into place and the scene feels closer to true. It takes a little push and adjust, a quiet effort to hold the line against doubt. In real life, you keep testing the idea, let the evidence speak, and the sense of certainty settles in your chest.

Real Context

Prove means to demonstrate the truth of something, to establish the validity of a claim, or to show or confirm by evidence. In everyday use you might say a test will prove a theory, a document can prove your identity, or a study can prove that a treatment works. Prove implies a strong assurance that something is true based on facts, data, or logic, often after observation, experiment, or careful reasoning. Learners should distinguish prove from imply or guess, and from persuade, which is about convincing others rather than establishing fact. Irregular forms are prove, proved, proven (or proved in some varieties).

Usage Reminders

  • Keep evidence-focused; use with data or experiments
  • Choose proven or proven/proved correctly for past cases
  • Avoid confusing with imply or suggest
  • Use with legal, scientific, or formal contexts
  • Remember irregular forms: prove, proved, proven/proved
  • Prefer 'prove' when asserting facts obtainable from evidence

Common Misconceptions

  • Prove = persuade; proving is about convincing others rather than establishing truth
  • Proven/proved confusion: use proven in formal context, proved in some variants
  • Mistaking imply with prove; imply means suggest, not confirm with evidence
  • Believing ‘prove’ works with guesses or beliefs without evidence
  • Confusing ‘prove’ with ‘explain’ when evidence is not needed

Thinking Differences

Explain to an English speaker learning English: highlight that prove emphasizes confirming facts with evidence, not just persuading; show how it pairs with data, tests, and logic.

Learning Tips

  • Connect prove with concrete data, experiments, or logic
  • Practice past tense forms: proved, proven/proved
  • Differentiate prove from imply and persuade
  • Use in formal contexts (legal/scientific) for accuracy
  • Create short evidence-based sentences
  • Check whether the claim is supported by evidence

Related Listening

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