You've got a proven work record, which gives you a big advantage. People on trial are innocent until proven guilty.

PROVEN definition: a past participle of prove See examples of proven used in a sentence.

Adjective proven (comparative more proven, superlative most proven) Having been proved; having proved its value or truth.

Having been demonstrated or verified without doubt: "a Soviet leader of proven shrewdness and prescience" (Joyce Carol Oates). See Usage Note at prove.

Proven is a past participle of prove. Proven is the usual form of the past participle when you are using it as an adjective.

Either proved or proven is standard as the past participle of prove: Events have proved (or proven) him wrong. As a modifier, proven is by far the more common: a proven fact.

Proven refers to something that has been demonstrated or verified as true or valid. This typically involves using evidence, logical reasoning, experiments, or factual information to confirm the truth or existence of a particular statement, theory, or claim.

Definitions of proven adjective established beyond doubt “a proven liar” “a Soviet leader of proven shrewdness” synonyms: proved established

Proved is the simple past tense and past participle of the verb prove, which means to show evidence for something. Proven is the adjective form of this word, and can be used as a past participle in some instances. Most places prefer proved as a past participle and proven as an adjective.