¡Escribe cualquier palabra!

Cómo Pronunciar "syllogism"

word

ˈsɪlədʒɪz(ə)m
SIL-uh-jiz-um
sˈɪlədʒˌɪzəm
SIL-uh-JIZ-um

Definición

A syllogism is a logical argument that uses two statements (premises) to reach a conclusion. It is a tool commonly used in philosophy and logic to show how conclusions are drawn.

Transcripción IPA

Inglés Americano

ˈsɪlədʒɪz(ə)m

Inglés Británico

sˈɪlədʒˌɪzəm

Pronunciación Simplificada

EE.UU.

SIL-uh-jiz-um

UK

SIL-uh-JIZ-um

Escucha en Contexto

A classic syllogism is: All humans are mortal. Socrates is a human. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.

We studied syllogism in our logic class.

A syllogism uses two statements to reach a logical conclusion.

Her argument was structured like a syllogism, so it was easy to follow.