different between preliminary vs prosyllogism

preliminary

English

Alternative forms

  • præliminary (archaic)

Etymology

From the French préliminaire or from Modern Latin prael?min?ris, formed from prae- (before) + l?men (threshold) + -?ris (adjectival suffix); compare Latin l?min?ris (of or belonging to a threshold).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) enPR: pr?l?m??n?ri, IPA(key): /p???l?m?n??i/
  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: pr?l?m??n?ri, IPA(key): /p???l?m?n??i/

Adjective

preliminary (not comparable)

  1. In preparation for the main matter; initial, introductory, preparatory.
    Synonyms: initial, introductory, preparatory
    Antonyms: definitive, final
    • And then, after a few preliminary tries, the whole farm burst out into 'Beasts of England' in tremendous unison.

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

preliminary (plural preliminaries)

  1. A preparation for a main matter; an introduction.
  2. Any of a series of sports events that determine the finalists
  3. A relatively minor contest that precedes a major one, especially in boxing

Translations

preliminary From the web:

  • what preliminary means
  • what preliminary hearing
  • what preliminary information
  • what preliminary results mean
  • what preliminary investigation
  • what does it mean preliminary
  • what is a preliminary


prosyllogism

English

Etymology

pro- +? syllogism

Noun

prosyllogism (plural prosyllogisms)

  1. (logic) A syllogism that is preliminary or logically essential to another syllogism.
  2. (logic) The conclusion of such a syllogism, which becomes a premise of the following syllogism.

prosyllogism From the web:

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