Credibility

  • 61street credibility — noun credibility among young fashionable urban individuals • Syn: ↑street cred, ↑cred • Hypernyms: ↑credibility, ↑credibleness, ↑believability * * * ˈstreet cred [st …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 62source credibility — UK US noun [U] MARKETING ► the degree to which people believe and trust what other people and organizations tell them about a particular product or service: »The source credibility theory states that people are more likely to be persuaded when… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 63Street-Credibility — Street Cre|di|bi|li|ty, auch Street|cre|di|bi|li|ty [...kredi biləti] die; <aus gleichbed. engl. street credibility, zu credibility »Glaubwürdigkeit«, dies zu credit, vgl. 1↑Kredit> Vertrauen erweckender Eindruck, glaubwürdiges Image bei… …

    Das große Fremdwörterbuch

  • 64challenge the credibility of — index impeach Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 65a\ credibility\ gap — noun hackneyed phrase politics An apparent discrepancy between what the government says and what one can observe for oneself. There was a tremendous credibility gap in the Usa during the Watergate years …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 66street credibility — N UNCOUNT Street credibility is the same as street cred. [mainly BRIT] Syn: street cred, cred …

    English dictionary

  • 67(a) credibility gap — a difference between what someone says about a situation and what you know or see is true. There s a credibility gap developing between me and my builders. This is the third week they ve told me they ll finish by Friday …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 68street credibility — street cred UK / US or street credibility UK / US noun [uncountable] informal respect or admiration among young fashionable people, especially in a city …

    English dictionary

  • 69source credibility — / sɔ:s kredəˌbɪlɪti/ noun the image people have of someone which will determine that person’s credibility …

    Marketing dictionary in english

  • 70hierarchy of credibility — A concept introduced by (in ‘Whose Side Are We On?’, Social Problems, 1967), to capture social inequalities and the moral hierarchy of society. For Becker, those at the top (of an organization or a society) are seen to be more credible, those at… …

    Dictionary of sociology