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1 abstruse
[əb'stru:s](difficult to understand: abstruse reasoning.) svært tilgængelig; dunkel; vanskelig at forstå* * *[əb'stru:s](difficult to understand: abstruse reasoning.) svært tilgængelig; dunkel; vanskelig at forstå -
2 argue
1) ((with with someone, about something) to quarrel with (a person) or discuss (something) with a person in a not very friendly way: I'm not going to argue; Will you children stop arguing with each other about whose toy that is!) diskutere; argumentere; skændes2) ((with for, against) to suggest reasons for or for not doing something: I argued for/against accepting the plan.) argumentere3) ((with into, out of) to persuade (a person) (not) to do something: I'll try to argue him into going; He argued her out of buying the dress.) drøfte; overtale4) (to discuss, giving one's reasoning: She argued the point very cleverly.) diskutere; forsvare•- arguable- argument
- argumentative* * *1) ((with with someone, about something) to quarrel with (a person) or discuss (something) with a person in a not very friendly way: I'm not going to argue; Will you children stop arguing with each other about whose toy that is!) diskutere; argumentere; skændes2) ((with for, against) to suggest reasons for or for not doing something: I argued for/against accepting the plan.) argumentere3) ((with into, out of) to persuade (a person) (not) to do something: I'll try to argue him into going; He argued her out of buying the dress.) drøfte; overtale4) (to discuss, giving one's reasoning: She argued the point very cleverly.) diskutere; forsvare•- arguable- argument
- argumentative -
3 argument
1) (a quarrel or unfriendly discussion: They are having an argument about/over whose turn it is.) skænderi2) (a set of reasons; a piece of reasoning: The argument for/against going; a philosophical argument.) argument; argumentation* * *1) (a quarrel or unfriendly discussion: They are having an argument about/over whose turn it is.) skænderi2) (a set of reasons; a piece of reasoning: The argument for/against going; a philosophical argument.) argument; argumentation -
4 fallacious
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5 fallacy
['fæləsi]plural - fallacies; noun(a wrong idea or belief, usually one that is generally believed to be true; false reasoning: That belief is just a fallacy.) vildfarelse; fejlslutning* * *['fæləsi]plural - fallacies; noun(a wrong idea or belief, usually one that is generally believed to be true; false reasoning: That belief is just a fallacy.) vildfarelse; fejlslutning -
6 illogical
[i'lo‹ikəl](not logical; not based on, or showing, sound reasoning.) ulogisk- illogicality* * *[i'lo‹ikəl](not logical; not based on, or showing, sound reasoning.) ulogisk- illogicality -
7 logic
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8 solid
['solid] 1. adjective1) (not easily changing shape; not in the form of liquid or gas: Water becomes solid when it freezes; solid substances.) fast2) (not hollow: The tyres of the earliest cars were solid.) massiv3) (firm and strongly made (and therefore sound and reliable): That's a solid piece of furniture; His argument is based on good solid facts/reasoning.) solid4) (completely made of one substance: This bracelet is made of solid gold; We dug till we reached solid rock.) ren; massiv5) (without breaks, gaps or flaws: The policemen formed themselves into a solid line; They are solid in their determination to strike.) ubrudt; fast6) (having height, breadth and width: A cube is a solid figure.) fast7) (consecutive; without a pause: I've been working for six solid hours.) uafbrudt2. adverb(without interruption; continuously: She was working for six hours solid.) uafbrudt3. noun1) (a substance that is solid: Butter is a solid but milk is a liquid.) fast stof2) (a shape that has length, breadth and height.) fast legeme•- solidify
- solidification
- solidity
- solidness
- solidly
- solid fuel* * *['solid] 1. adjective1) (not easily changing shape; not in the form of liquid or gas: Water becomes solid when it freezes; solid substances.) fast2) (not hollow: The tyres of the earliest cars were solid.) massiv3) (firm and strongly made (and therefore sound and reliable): That's a solid piece of furniture; His argument is based on good solid facts/reasoning.) solid4) (completely made of one substance: This bracelet is made of solid gold; We dug till we reached solid rock.) ren; massiv5) (without breaks, gaps or flaws: The policemen formed themselves into a solid line; They are solid in their determination to strike.) ubrudt; fast6) (having height, breadth and width: A cube is a solid figure.) fast7) (consecutive; without a pause: I've been working for six solid hours.) uafbrudt2. adverb(without interruption; continuously: She was working for six hours solid.) uafbrudt3. noun1) (a substance that is solid: Butter is a solid but milk is a liquid.) fast stof2) (a shape that has length, breadth and height.) fast legeme•- solidify
- solidification
- solidity
- solidness
- solidly
- solid fuel -
9 theorem
['Ɵiərəm](especially in mathematics, something that has been or must be proved to be true by careful reasoning: a geometrical theorem.)* * *['Ɵiərəm](especially in mathematics, something that has been or must be proved to be true by careful reasoning: a geometrical theorem.)
См. также в других словарях:
Reasoning — is the cognitive process of looking for reasons for beliefs, conclusions, actions or feelings. [ Kirwin, Christopher. 1995. Reasoning . In Ted Honderich (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Philosophy . Oxford: Oxford University Press: p. 748] Humans… … Wikipedia
Reasoning — Rea son*ing, n. 1. The act or process of adducing a reason or reasons; manner of presenting one s reasons. [1913 Webster] 2. That which is offered in argument; proofs or reasons when arranged and developed; course of argument. [1913 Webster] His… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
reasoning — reasoning; un·reasoning; … English syllables
reasoning — index contemplation, dialectic, discursive (analytical), judgment (discernment), justification, pensive … Law dictionary
reasoning — (n.) late 14c., exercise of the power of reason; act or process of thinking logically; an instance of this; see REASON (Cf. reason) (v.) … Etymology dictionary
reasoning — [n] logic, interpretation acumen, analysis, apriority, argument, case, cogitation, concluding, corollary, deduction, dialectics, exposition, generalization, hypothesis, illation, induction, inference, interpretation, logistics, premise, proof,… … New thesaurus
reasoning — [rē′zəniŋ] n. 1. the drawing of inferences or conclusions from known or assumed facts; use of reason 2. the proofs or reasons resulting from this … English World dictionary
Reasoning — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Reasoning >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 1 =>{ant,477,} reasoning ratiocination rationalism Sgm: N 1 dialectics dialectics induction generalization GRP: N 2 Sgm: N 2 discussion discussion comment Sgm: N 2 … English dictionary for students
reasoning — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ careful, sound ▪ circular, faulty, flawed, specious (formal) ▪ underlying ▪ … Collocations dictionary
reasoning — n. 1) cogent, logical, plausible, solid, sound reasoning 2) faulty; shrewd; specious reasoning 3) deductive; inductive reasoning 4) reasoning that + clause (her reasoning that the crime had been committed elsewhere proved to be true) * * * [… … Combinatory dictionary
reasoning — Any process of drawing a conclusion from a set of premises may be called a process of reasoning. If the conclusion concerns what to do, the process is called practical reasoning, otherwise pure or theoretical reasoning. Evidently such processes… … Philosophy dictionary