A justification in a report is a rationale or explanation provided for a decision, action, or recommendation. It helps to clarify the reasoning behind a particular course of action or proposal, often based on evidence or analysis presented in the report. Justifications are important for supporting the validity and soundness of conclusions drawn in a report.
A board report is a business report, a report of the business of a board of directors or a report of a specific meeting of a board. A business report can be on any topic whatsoever that involves any aspect of a business; it can be a report to or from the board of directors, a profit and loss report to shareholders or a government agency, to a justification for the expense to paint the rest rooms.
The adjective of justification is justifiable.The adverb of justification is justifiably.
Police reports are generally supposed to contain facts and not opinions, but there are some assumptions in any report. If an assumption was made inaccurately or without appropriate justification, the rationale for the assumption can be challenged in court.
what is project justification
justification by faith
His justification for his actions didn't impress me.
I was not impressed by the painters justification for not finishing the work
no revenge is not justification for capital punishment
The justification of methods in a science lab report explains the rationale behind the experimental design and techniques used. It highlights why specific materials, procedures, and controls were chosen, demonstrating their appropriateness for addressing the research question and ensuring reliable results. This section also addresses potential limitations and how the chosen methods mitigate them, reinforcing the credibility of the findings. Ultimately, it provides clarity and transparency, allowing others to replicate or understand the experiment.
The "lack of justification" could be expressed as "groundlessness" or possibly irrationality.
Justification is a written reason for why you made a statement. For example if you say a figure is a Square then you would say something like the diagonals are both congruent and perpendicular to each other.
If the report is written by more than one person, the appropriate pronoun is 'we'. If it is written by one person, the appropriate pronoun is 'I'. There is a convention that the author(s) of a report should be referred to in the third person (for example, 'The present author believes that ...', or 'This was discovered by the authors last year ...'). However, there is no justification for this on any grounds of readability, clarity, or grammar. It is jargon.