Pronunciation: /ɛmˈpɪrɪkəl/
adjective relating to, based on, or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic
A1 Scientists conduct empirical research to gather data.
A2 The students used empirical evidence to support their arguments in the debate.
B1 The psychologist based her conclusions on empirical observations and experiments.
B2 The new drug underwent rigorous empirical testing before being approved for use.
C1 The professor's empirical study on climate change was published in a prestigious journal.
C2 The company made decisions based on empirical data rather than speculation.
formal The researchers conducted an empirical study to gather data on the effectiveness of the new drug.
informal She based her argument on empirical evidence from various sources.
slang I don't need proof, I just know it works from my own empirical research.
figurative His decision was not based on empirical evidence, but rather on gut feeling.
empirically
empiricals
more empirical
most empirical
empirically
will be empirical
has been empirical
is being empirical
empirical
empirical
to empirical
empirically
empirical