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Prove

Prove is a verb meaning to establish the truth of a statement through evidence or argument. In everyday language it can mean demonstrating something convincingly, even if absolute certainty is not claimed. In mathematics and formal disciplines, proof has a more stringent, precise meaning.

In mathematics, a proof is a logically valid argument that derives a conclusion from accepted axioms and

Common proof techniques include direct proofs, proofs by contrapositive, proofs by contradiction (reductio ad absurdum), and

Outside mathematics, proof usually means evidence or justification for a claim. Scientific claims rely on converging

Etymology and history: prove derives from Latin probare, through Old French prover; the term has long indicated

previously
proven
statements.
A
proof
must
be
rigorous
within
a
specified
formal
system
and
provide
a
transparent
chain
of
reasoning
that
others
can
verify.
The
conclusion
follows
necessarily
from
the
premises
if
the
reasoning
is
sound.
mathematical
induction.
Some
proofs
are
constructive,
yielding
an
explicit
example,
while
others
are
nonconstructive
but
still
valid
within
the
system.
evidence
rather
than
absolute
proofs,
and
repeatable
results
strengthen
belief
in
a
hypothesis.
In
law,
the
standard
of
proof—such
as
beyond
a
reasonable
doubt
or
preponderance
of
the
evidence—governs
outcomes
and
varies
by
context.
testing
and
verification.
Over
time,
its
sense
broadened
from
practical
testing
to
rigorous
mathematical
justification,
while
remaining
rooted
in
the
idea
of
establishing
truth.