First half of an hypothetic statement (in logic)
Sinônimos
Examples for "cause"
Examples for "cause"
1Main outcome measure: All-cause mortality at a mean follow-up of 37 months.
2Fibroids are not life threatening; however, they may cause some health problems.
3Let me ask one last, highly specific question 'cause it fascinates me.
4Clearly the direction of common cause, federation of free people, global law.
5As a result of this, any unforeseen events can cause major problems.
1I always thought the premise could be explored a million different ways.
2Smith said, That quaint premise was clearly established years ago, old friend.
3However, that premise is light and can only sustain for so long.
4Clearly this is someone unfamiliar with the basic premise of democracy itself.
5This advertising model is essentially the economic premise of the modern internet.
1However, the antecedents of SIP in that age group are less clear.
2First find the antecedents, then parse the relatives, in the following sentences:-
3These results further highlight the importance of childhood antecedents of adulthood disease.
4Aims: To compare childhood psychological antecedents of adult schizophrenia and affective psychosis.
5This conviction is deepened by the antecedents of the present unhappy war.
1Sometimes it is clearer to introduce the antecedent of the pronoun instead.
2There is here in the subject no antecedent feeling tending to morality.
3Frequently our brains, our antecedent plans, have no part in the decision.
4Heretics have as direct a relation to antecedent conditions as the orthodox.
5The antecedent grace of God touches man from within or from without.
1For we may either assert or deny the antecedent or the consequent of the conjunctive.
2Introduction: Nutritional decline is typically accepted as a consequent of the course of treatment for cancer.
3The consequent of the hypothetical major premiss is termed pâpanâ because it is got from the antecedent.
4He had also taken upon Himself the mortal life consequent of the human frame which He inhabited.
5The former clause whereof is that which Aeschylus here saith expressly, and the latter but the consequent of that.
1Having a memory is a necessary and sufficient condition for possessing a self-identity.
2A cause either necessitates the effect, or is a sufficient condition for its occurrence.
3The brain is a necessary condition for ordinary consciousness, but not a sufficient condition.
4Having a memory is not a necessary nor a sufficient condition for possessing a self-identity.
5It is not however a sufficient condition, Monti said during a speech at the London Stock Exchange.
1It is the inevitable consequence of the way we commission public services.
2This development is a natural consequence of more open and transparent government.
3Thus CXCR4-using virus may emerge as a possible consequence of immune deficiency.
4In consequence of this conduct, the General Court passed the following order:-
5However, this may be the consequence of as yet unidentified depletion mechanisms.
6Lawmakers since have said that was an unintended consequence of the law.
7They left Ireland immediately afterwards in consequence of their appointment in India.
8The establishment of the opposite idea is wholly the consequence of revelation.
9Introduction: Excess of incidence rates is the expected consequence of service screening.
10It is a consequence of the extremely serious and rare three-year drought.
11The inevitable consequence of raising the borrowing limits is higher house prices.
12King, in consequence of some peculiarities in the currents at its N.W.
13At the time, Brennan believed this was an unfortunate consequence of freedom.
14The entire universe exists in consequence of the power of these two.
15In consequence of this report, we attempted to work the ships in.
16In consequence of his affluence, the king succeeds in obtaining great honours.
Translations for consequence of