Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Supposed (but not necessarily) real ", 12 letters:
hypothetical

Alternative clues for the word hypothetical

Word definitions for hypothetical in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADVERB purely ▪ A sterile culture because a purely hypothetical one, he wrote. ▪ Sense organs for lunar and planetary influences, for atmospheric pressure and cosmic rays are as yet purely hypothetical . 2. ■ NOUN case ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. based on hypothesis; "a hypothetical situation"; "the site of a hypothetical colony" [syn: hypothetic ]

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Hypothetical is the fifth studio album by British progressive metal band Threshold . The album was released on 20 March 2001 (see 2001 in music ). This is the first album to feature current drummer Johanne James , who had previously played with the band ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1580s, from Greek hypothetikos "pertaining to a hypothesis," from hypothesis (see hypothesis ). Related: Hypothetically ; hypothetic .\n

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Based upon a hypothesis; conjectural 2 (context philosophy English) conditional; contingent upon some hypothesis/antecedent n. A hypothetical situation or proposition

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hypothetic \Hy`po*thet"ic\, Hypothetical \Hy`po*thet"ic*al\, a. Characterized by, or of the nature of, an hypothesis; conditional; assumed without proof, for the purpose of reasoning and deducing proof, or of accounting for some fact or phenomenon. Causes ...

Usage examples of hypothetical.

Maybe I imagined myself saving lives, should the end of the world prove to be more than hypothetical and less than instantaneous.

But no Converse or Contrapositive of such a Disjunctive can be obtained, except by first casting it into the hypothetical or categorical form.

They are usually divided into two classes, Hypothetical and Disjunctive.

Hypothetical Syllogism is one that consists of a Hypothetical Major Premise, a Categorical Minor Premise, and a Categorical Conclusion.

Syllogisms with two hypothetical premises leave us still with a hypothetical conclusion.

Dilemma, then, is a compound Conditional Syllogism, having for its Major Premise two Hypothetical Propositions, and for its Minor Premise a Disjunctive Proposition, whose alternative terms either affirm the Antecedents or deny the Consequents of the two Hypothetical Propositions forming the Major Premise.

The relation between the premises of a valid syllogism and its conclusion is the same as the relation between the antecedent and consequent of a hypothetical proposition.

Sometimes the agents are known, and only the law of their operation is hypothetical, as was at first the case with the law of gravitation itself.

Granting that the hypothetical cause is real and adequate, the investigation is not complete.

Wherever anything in the pure spatial adjacency of physical things remains inexplicable, resort is had to hypothetical pictures whose content consists once more of nothing but spatially extended and spatially adjacent items.

He was spiritually akin to Goethe, also, in that he guarded himself strictly against substituting for the contents of our perception conveyed by nature purely hypothetical entities which, while fashioned after the world of the senses, are, in principle, imperceptible.

Instead of starting with phenomena produced by electricity when it is already in action, and deriving from them a hypothetical picture, we begin by observing the processes to which electricity owes its appearance.

For if by the logical following of this path - as in modern theoretical physics - the whole universe is dissolved into units which can no longer be distinguished from each other, then it will become impossible to count these parts, for it cannot be established whether any given one of these hypothetical elemental particles has been counted or not.

When we interpret the arrangement of numbers found there on a nominalistic basis, as is done when the axis- and angle-relationships of crystals are reduced to a mere propinquity of the atoms distributed like a grid in space, or when the difference in angle of the position of the various colours in the spectrum is reduced to mere differences in frequency of the electromagnetic oscillations in a hypothetical ether - then we bar the way to the comprehension not only of number itself, as a quality among qualities, but also of all other qualities in nature.

The encoding functions for a perceptual variable are shown for 6 neurons in a hypothetical cortical map.