witnesses

IPA/ˈwɪt.nəs/
KK[wˈɪtnəsəz]IPA/ˈwɪt.nəs/

witnesses — noun

  • witnessessingular
  • witnessesesplural

1. a person who is present when something happens and sees it with their own eyes,

1.名詞B1
釋義

a person who is present when something happens and sees it with their own eyes, especially a crime, accident, or other notable event

例句

Otis was the only witness to the car accident at the junction.

witness + to + noun phrase (the event)

Police are looking for witnesses who saw the robbery outside the bank.

plural: witnesses + who + saw + event

同義詞
  • eyewitness

    emphasises having seen the event directly with one's own eyes; stronger than general witness

  • observer

    more neutral; a person who watches but may not have a legal role

  • bystander

    someone present at an event by chance, not actively involved

反義詞
  • participant

    someone who takes part in the event rather than just watching

文法句型

witness + to/of + noun phrase

用法筆記

Often used with 'to' to specify the event (a witness to the crash) or with 'of' for the location or time (a witness of the era). Frequently paired with 'eyewitness', though 'eyewitness' emphasises having seen directly.

常見錯誤

He was witness of the crime.
He was a witness to the crime.
💡Use 'a witness to' for events with the indefinite article.

2. the experience or fact of seeing something happen, without necessarily taking an

2.名詞B2
釋義

the experience or fact of seeing something happen, without necessarily taking any further action

例句

The old photographs bear witness to a way of life that has disappeared.

fixed phrase: 'bear witness to' + noun phrase

Talia's diary is witness to the struggles she faced as a young artist.

同義詞
  • testimony

    stronger emphasis on providing formal evidence

  • attestation

    very formal; a formal declaration that something is true

文法句型

bear witness to + noun phrase

be witness to + noun phrase

用法筆記

Frequently appears in the fixed expressions 'bear witness to' (testify to something's existence or truth) and 'be witness to' (having experienced or seen something). The noun is typically used without an article in these patterns.

3. a person who attends the signing of a legal paper and then puts their own name o

3.名詞B2
釋義

a person who attends the signing of a legal paper and then puts their own name on it as proof that everything was properly executed and the signer was willing

例句

We need two witnesses to sign the marriage certificate after the ceremony.

plural: witnesses + to + sign + document

Selim asked his neighbour to act as a witness for his will.

act as a + witness + for + document

同義詞
  • signatory

    refers to a person who signs a document themselves, not someone who merely watches others sign

  • attestor

    formal legal term for a person who testifies that a document was properly signed

文法句型

witness + to + document/agreement

用法筆記

Unlike 'eyewitness' (noun sense 1), this sense focuses on the formal, legal role of confirming a signature or transaction, not on observing an event. The witness must usually be an independent adult who is not a party to the document.

4. someone called to give sworn statements before a judge or jury about what they k

4.名詞B1
釋義

someone called to give sworn statements before a judge or jury about what they know regarding a legal case, sometimes offering expert opinions in their field

例句

The witness swore to tell the truth before taking the stand.

Dr. Okafor appeared as an expert witness in the medical malpractice trial.

expert witness — specialist who gives opinion evidence

同義詞
  • deponent

    formal legal term for someone who gives sworn testimony, usually in writing

  • testifier

    more general; someone who gives testimony in any context

文法句型

witness + for/against + noun phrase

用法筆記

Often used with prepositions: 'for' (witness for the defence / prosecution) or 'against' (witness against the accused). An 'expert witness' is a specialist (e.g. a doctor or engineer) who gives professional opinions, not just factual accounts. 'Hostile witness' refers to someone who does not cooperate with the side that called them.

常見錯誤

The witness said to the court that he saw the accident.
The witness told the court that he saw the accident.
💡'Say' is not typically used with an indirect object in legal contexts; 'tell' is preferred.

5. a physical sign, mark, or measurable result that shows something has happened or

5.名詞C1
釋義

a physical sign, mark, or measurable result that shows something has happened or reveals a truth about a situation — for example, cracks showing years of neglect, or a drop in sales showing a product's failure

例句

The cracks spreading across the ceiling are a clear witness to years of water damage.

inanimate physical sign + be a + witness + to + past condition (evidence of)

The rising number of empty shops is a witness to the town's slow economic decline.

statistical indicator + be a witness to + abstract condition

同義詞
  • testament

    similar figurative meaning; often used of lasting proof ('a testament to hard work')

  • evidence

    more direct; facts or signs that show something is true

  • proof

    stronger than evidence; conclusive demonstration of a truth

文法句型

be a witness to + noun phrase

stand as a witness

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 1 (EYEWITNESS), which refers to a living person; this sense uses 'witness' as an abstract or evidentiary concept. Critically distinguish from sense 2 (ACT OF SEEING): sense 2 personifies an inanimate object as if it were present and 'saw' what happened, using the fixed phrases 'bear witness to' or 'be witness to'; sense 5 treats the object itself as the direct evidence or symptom — the cracks ARE the proof of damage, not a watcher of it. The subject in this sense is always a concrete or measurable phenomenon that functions as an indicator.

witnesses — verb