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corollary
[ kawr-uh-ler-ee, kor-; especially British, kuh-rol-uh-ree ]
noun
- Mathematics. a proposition that is incidentally proved in proving another proposition.
- an immediate consequence or easily drawn conclusion.
- a natural consequence or result.
corollary
/ 办蓹藞谤蓲濒蓹谤瑟 /
noun
- a proposition that follows directly from the proof of another proposition
- an obvious deduction
- a natural consequence or result
adjective
- consequent or resultant
corollary
- A statement that follows with little or no proof required from an already proven statement. For example, it is a theorem in geometry that the angles opposite two congruent sides of a triangle are also congruent. A corollary to that statement is that an equilateral triangle is also equiangular.
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of corollary1
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of corollary1
Example Sentences
鈥淲hat I鈥檓 enjoying about 鈥楳odville鈥 is that, while it may not be a direct corollary to 鈥楤lade Runner,鈥 it has enough of the DNA to make it feel like it鈥檚 at least adjacent.
The second part of that corollary is to leave a place better than I found it.
One 鈥渁dvanced industry鈥 where California, and in particular Southern California, still has a leg up is aerospace, and its corollary, defense.
Such auditory corollary discharge signals start and end in two subregions of the brain's top folded surface, or cortex, a new study shows.
Arguably, the Monk's terrifying and/or hilarious saga offered a local corollary to the specter that's haunting all of Europe, and nowhere more than Ireland: Trump's impending second term.
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