Advertisement
Advertisement
consequent
[kon-si-kwent, -kwuhnt]
adjective
following as an effect or result; resulting (often followed by on, upon, orto ).
a fall in price consequent to a rise in production.
following as a logical conclusion.
a consequent law.
following or progressing logically.
consequent reasoning.
noun
anything that follows upon something else, with or without a causal relationship.
Logic., the second member of a conditional proposition, as “Caesar was a great general” in “If Caesar conquered Gaul, he was a great general.”
Mathematics.
the second term of a ratio.
the second of two vectors in a dyad.
consequent
/ ˈkɒnsɪkwənt /
adjective
following as an effect or result
following as a logical conclusion or by rational argument
(of a river) flowing in the direction of the original slope of the land or dip of the strata
noun
something that follows something else, esp as a result
logic the resultant clause in a conditional sentence
logic the fallacy of inferring the antecedent of a conditional sentence, given the truth of the conditional and its consequent, as if John is six feet tall, he's more than five feet: he's more than five feet so he's six feet
an obsolete term for denominator
Other Word Forms
- nonconsequent adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of consequent1
Word History and Origins
Origin of consequent1
Example Sentences
The study is a 10-year effort to study the exposures to dangerous substances and consequent health effects.
“For example, home building could be delayed because of a reduction in specific skills” resulting in “a consequent increase in unemployment for the remaining workforce.”
Arm in arm with this, and less discussed, is the death of deductive logic, the ability to understand cause and effect by composing simple conditional arguments with an antecedent and a consequent.
However, an eye injury and consequent lack of sparring, chaos instigated by his team and tragedy back home in Lancashire all contributed to Fury's demise.
But if many erupted, he says, a feedback loop could take hold, with ice loss leading to more volcanism, and more eruptions to more ice loss and consequent sea-level rise.
Advertisement
Related Words
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse