Seems to be good and acceptable but lacks real merit, pleasing but deceptive
There is no such thing as a "cadidate number".
Specious is an adjective.
( sa pi ish ) = specious
write about the specious of ersinial fotida?
henry clay
The possessive form of "their" is "theirs."
The Russians claim that the American story of sending a man to moon is specious.
"Specious" means "seemingly well-reasoned, plausible and true, but actually untrue".
Specious means "misleading in appearance, or something that may seem plausible at first but isn't true or accurate." Following is a use of "specious" in sentence: "The thief had a specious argument, and soon people realized he was the guilty party."
Specious is used to describe something that sounds true or plausible but is not: The Area 51 theorists use some very specious arguments to validate their assumptions.
amphibian
No. In fact the statement: "A specious argument is one in which a great deal of space is given for alternative p[oints of view" is an example of a specious statement. At first sight it looks plausible. But when you think about it, it is incorrect. And THAT is whar specious means.