syllogism: [14] A syllogism is etymologically something ‘reasoned together’, hence ‘inferred’. The word comes via Old French sillogisme and Latin syllogismus from Greek sullogismós, a derivative of sullogīzesthai ‘reason together, infer’. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix sun- ‘together’ and logízesthai ‘reason, reckon, compute’, a derivative of lógos ‘word, discourse, computation’ (source of English logarithm, logic, etc). => logarithm, logic
syllogism (n.)
late 14c., from Old French silogisme "a syllogism, scholastic argument based on a formula or proof" (13c., Modern French syllogisme), from Latin syllogismus, from Greek syllogismos "a syllogism," originally "inference, conclusion; computation, calculation," from syllogizesthai "bring together before the mind, compute, conclude," literally "think together," from assimilated form of syn- "together" (see syn-) + logizesthai "to reason, count," from logos "a reckoning, reason" (see logos).
例文
1. The ramifications or the mystery of a syllogism can become a weariness and a bore.三段論証法の分岐や神秘は退屈で厄介なものになる。
2.Then,how contemporary looks upon the reduction of Aristotelian modal syllogism ?
では、現代論理はサブモダリティ三段論の帰化をどのように見ているのだろうか。
3.A syllogism a three-step argument containing three different terms.
甲三段論には3つのステップがある論点には3つの異なる側面が含まれている。
4.The application of law mainly uses deductive inference or syllogism inference.