释义 |
apodicticenUK
ap·o·dic·tic A0368300 (ăp′ə-dĭk′tĭk)adj. Necessarily or demonstrably true; incontrovertible. [Latin apodīcticus, from Greek apodeiktikos, from apodeiktos, demonstrable, from apodeiknunai, to demonstrate : apo-, apo- + deiknunai, to show; see deik- in Indo-European roots.] ap′o·dic′ti·cal·ly adv.ap•o•dic•tic (ˌæp əˈdɪk tɪk) also ap•o•deic•tic (-ˈdaɪk-) adj. demonstrably or necessarily true. [1645–55; < Latin apodīcticus < Greek apodeiktikós proving fully. See apo-, deictic] ap`o•dic′ti•cal•ly, adv. ThesaurusAdj. | 1. | apodictic - of a proposition; necessarily true or logically certainapodeicticlogic - the branch of philosophy that analyzes inferencetrue - consistent with fact or reality; not false; "the story is true"; "it is undesirable to believe a proposition when there is no ground whatever for supposing it true"- B. Russell; "the true meaning of the statement" | TranslationsapodicticenUK Related to apodictic: casuisticSynonyms for apodicticadj of a propositionSynonymsRelated Words |