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deductive
[dih-duhk-tiv]
deductive
/ ɪˈʌɪ /
adjective
of or relating to deduction
deductive reasoning
Confusables Note
Other 51Թ Forms
- deductively adverb
- nondeductive adjective
- nondeductively adverb
- undeductive adjective
- undeductively adverb
- ˈܳپ adverb
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of deductive1
Example Sentences
For her part, Patience tells Bea, “Your deductive leaps of logic can be haphazard and your notes are cursory,” but she admires her clearance rate, the best in the country.
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.
Not through any kind of intuition or deductive superpower, mind you.
Instead of receiving science through set experiments with known outcomes, students should learn to apply deductive and inductive reasoning to weigh information before blindly accepting results.
A mathematician might point to a deductive argument, a scientist to experiments, and a lawyer to courtroom evidence and testimony.
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