From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishwell-documentedˌwell-ˈdocumented adjective REAL/NOT IMAGINARYif something is well-documented, people have written a lot about it and so the facts about it are clear His life is remarkably well-documented. These are all well-documented facts.
Examples from the Corpus
well-documented• The role of body weight in affecting blood pressure is well-documented.• The results and benefits are well-documented.• In medieval times well-documented court activities were carried out at the caputs already discussed.• This is a generous and well-documented enterprise.• There is an intrinsic difficulty in understanding even very simple and comparatively well-documented episodes of religious wars.• Abraham Lincoln, too, had many well-documented major depressions.• Here, the value of well-documented museum collections or excavated finds can not be overstated.• Another well-documented scandal has been the sale of unsuitable or dangerous medicines in the Third World.• However, much of it may come from the collision of two well-documented trends in life today.