well-documented
English
Etymology
From well + documented.
Adjective
well-documented (comparative more well-documented, superlative most well-documented)
- Having extensive documentation and evidence.
- 2004, Michele J. Gelfand, Jeanne M. Brett, The Handbook of Negotiation and Culture, page 316:
- People are assumed to follow the maxim and submaxim, but cross-cultural differences are well-documented regarding the enactment of the submaxim.
- 2009 July 24, Holland Cotter, “Postcards From Canada’s ‘New North’”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 26 November 2022:
- It also entailed well-documented disadvantages: a population increase in an unsustaining economy, a battered self-identity, a plague of substance abuse.
- 2017 November 16, Bret Stephens, “Steve Bannon Is Bad for the Jews”, in The New York Times[2], archived from the original on 18 November 2017:
- It also means that when a right-wing Jewish group such as the ZOA chooses to overlook Bannon’s well-documented links to anti-Semitic white nationalists, it puts itself on a moral par with J.V.P. Bannon is the man who expressly called Breitbart News “the platform for the alt-right,” knowing full-well the toxic range of opinion encompassed by the term.