adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a brilliant/enquiring/logical etc mind
▪ a bright child with an enquiring mind
a logical order
▪ Put the events of the story into a logical order.
a logical reason
▪ People don’t always have logical reasons for the things they do.
a logical step
▪ She felt she had an aptitude for medicine. Her next logical step would be to begin studying when the summer was over.
a logical/rational explanation (=one that is based on facts)
▪ Physics finally gave us a rational explanation for the atom’s strange behaviour.
a natural/logical consequence (=that naturally/logically follows sth)
▪ Obviously disappointment is a natural consequence of defeat.
clear/logical thinking
▪ Above 24,000 feet, the lack of oxygen makes clear thinking almost impossible.
logical progression
▪ the logical progression from accountant to financial controller
logical sequence
▪ The questions should be asked in a logical sequence.
scientific/logical/legal reasoning
the logical conclusion (=one that makes sense when you think about it carefully)
▪ The logical conclusion is that short commercials are just as effective as longer ones.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
more
▪ It seems more logical to reposition the White knight with 24 d2.
▪ Sometimes Cindy or George would discover that Robbie had done something that made his response appear more logical.
▪ I think it would be much easier and more logical if they just took the key with them.
▪ If the resolution is not peaceful, the relationship could become colder, more logical.
▪ Had this apparently contradictory programme been worked out over a long period, it might have seemed more logical.
▪ A more logical reason for his drowning is religious and political differences.
▪ Who then more logical to head our new government but a business man?
▪ Why do its streets run in this particular way and not in some other way that seems more logical to us?
most
▪ Few or no other routes were available and so it was a most logical decision to opt for the sporting escape.
▪ This is the most logical answer in my view.
▪ The careful selection of the most logical buyers in order to reduce circulation size can therefore be a wasted effort.
▪ The favorite theory is the simplest, and the most logical.
▪ Fourthly, general practitioners are the most logical agent of the patients' demands.
▪ But even the most logical of us have illogical moments and problems with romance.
▪ Gephardt is the most logical champion to lift that banner.
only
▪ Others provide only logical or only circular shifts, and arithmetic shifts must be constructed from these basic operations.
▪ This is only logical, since the starting-points are the same.
▪ It is only logical, then, that he should now answer the same charges as his master.
perfectly
▪ The drop in salary for part time work is perfectly logical and acceptable, though not widely appreciated by colleagues.
▪ There is a perfectly logical reason why it seems so pointless and confusing.
▪ Having children has been a perfectly logical response of families to the hardship and famine which have resulted from these processes.
▪ It is all perfectly logical and unambiguous, but not designed for people.
▪ It was somehow both improbable and perfectly logical at the same time.
▪ An argument can be a perfectly logical deduction even if it involves a premise that is in fact false.
▪ It was a perfectly logical request, but one we in the media routinely ignore.
very
▪ In some ways it's a very logical list.
▪ We feel very strongly, technically, that there were very logical reasons to do it.
▪ If you think about it, this is very logical.
▪ They are very logical, methodical, and pragmatic in their approach to neural networks.
▪ She has a very logical, rational mind when it comes to a problem.
■ NOUN
answer
▪ Physics also tells us that there is a logical answer to the seeming conundrum of the diversity of species.
▪ Those arguments then assert that functional alignment is the only logical answer.
▪ But for himself he disliked coincidence of any sort and always sought for a logical answer.
▪ This is the most logical answer in my view.
▪ Though why she should need any kind of defence against Niall Grant was a question to which there seemed no logical answer.
▪ For every question, the client had a logical answer.
argument
▪ She says there are logical arguments for keeping Standish open.
▪ For the ordinary viewer, logical argument gives way to his or her gut reactions and personal experience in responding to people.
▪ The History essay is a logical argument in words which demonstrates historical knowledge, skills and understanding.
▪ This is often a logical argument and the real issue may be the amount of the deduction that should be made.
▪ The following are some of the tactics researchers have observed in effective managers: Persuasion Use of logical arguments to persuade others.
▪ I thought you were a ... a shallow man, incapable of producing a logical argument.
▪ The basic principle of giving reasons and evidence governs the building of a logical argument.
choice
▪ Rhone was the logical choice for gathering this information and preparing the application.
▪ Speedo was the only logical choice, but he put down Albert.
conclusion
▪ The logical conclusion of this conceited but surprisingly widely held stance should be to declare all such people as legal minors.
▪ In very general terms, the Renegade Jacket takes this principle to its logical conclusion.
▪ But even this seemingly logical conclusion must be taken with a grain of salt.
▪ Events must play themselves out to aesthetic, moral and logical conclusion.
▪ Reasoning can be applied to arguments that have false premises, however, and logical conclusions can be derived.
▪ This fact is not found in the Acts of the Apostles even though it would be a logical conclusion to the book.
▪ If you must worry, pursue your fears through to their logical conclusion.
consequence
▪ It is important to remember that logical consequences are never to be used as an idle threat.
▪ A logical consequence of this is an attempt to centralize all ReD planning.
▪ The logical consequence of this is that they will on occasion play unattractive parts!
▪ As the code gained widespread acceptance, certain logical consequences followed in its wake.
▪ The poor are a logical consequence of competitive economics; winners and losers, rich and poor.
▪ Perhaps this reflects my rule that dumbness is the logical consequence of being deaf.
deduction
▪ Here is an example of a logical deduction.
▪ And finally the detective must uncover the murderer by logical deduction from facts fairly put before the reader.
▪ An argument can be a perfectly logical deduction even if it involves a premise that is in fact false.
development
▪ The logical development of this was a film in which there were no heroes, only victims and violence.
▪ Among infantry weapons, the M16 was a logical development and fit our ideas concerning war to perfection.
▪ And from that I'd say that the Minus List is the logical development in Brimmer's career.
▪ In the logical development of this view it is the child who must choose.
▪ The logical development would be for closer examination of early foetuses with a view to detecting minor deficiencies which many babies are born with.
▪ The answering machine is a logical development and really does work rather well!
▪ Evidence of the logical development of this practice can also be found in one ow two early industrial buildings.
explanation
▪ He had no logical explanation for this.
▪ He willed himself not to panic: surely there was a logical explanation?
▪ But there is a logical explanation.
▪ Then, in the late 1940s a series of incidents happened that have no logical explanation and caused distress and horror.
▪ I was determined to get a logical explanation.
▪ If anyone did, the logical explanation was that it had fallen off.
extension
▪ He was, rather, a natural driver, for whom the wheel seemed a logical extension of his hands.
▪ Although dangerous, then, as a doctrine in practice, the admission of nodding is a logical extension of principle.
▪ So while wireless data services may be fairly new, they appear to be logical extensions to existing and trusted services.
▪ Thus team appraisal is a logical extension of the individual appraisal Interview.
▪ One need not be a Nobel Prize economist to divine the logical extension of that trend.
▪ Family history and the history of the local community offer logical extensions of this process.
▪ So much modern merchandise is themed with bestselling books that it makes a logical extension to the stock profile.
form
▪ Then, when the special symbol arrives, it could hand back the resolved logical form with the highest score.
▪ Nevertheless, as the very name reveals, there is still an emphasis on appearance rather than on logical form.
▪ For technical reasons, they argue that this representation is Chomskyan logical form.
mind
▪ Professor Norman Collies was a man noted for his logical mind.
▪ That logical mind of yours isn't going to stand any nonsense, is it?
▪ She thought it was from her father that she'd inherited her logical mind and a way with figures.
▪ His logical mind lent itself superbly to maths and he began to excel in the subject.
object
▪ What he should say is' I have several different kinds of logical object in my document.
▪ We have described a scheme for introducing logical objects into one hypertext system, Guide.
▪ The best approach is therefore for a document processing system to allow the user to define and use logical objects.
operation
▪ These are terms used in digital electronics to designate the basic logical operations on which digital systems are founded.
▪ During concrete operational development, a child attains the use of fully logical operations for the first time.
▪ There are instructions to move strings, to compare them, and to perform the usual logical operations.
▪ One logical operation, already discussed, is reversibility.
▪ However, it does allow numeric variables to be used for logical operations.
▪ Schemata for the logical operations of seriation and classification appear.
▪ Other paths can be programmed out of sequences of those provided, together with logical operations where necessary for masking, etc.
▪ This suggests that language is not necessary for the development of logical operations, but it clearly acts as a facilitator.
order
▪ The columns are headed by brief statements of key activities in that stage of the project, laid out in logical order.
▪ The individual terms included in that list can then be arranged in a logical order before beginning to draft.
▪ Strangely the instrumental chapters are spread throughout the book in no logical order.
outcome
▪ The move into production seems the logical outcome of his obsessive nature.
▪ This was a logical outcome of her avowed poverty and dependence on providence for all things.
▪ The logical outcome of this slow change of direction was to come later, but not much later.
▪ What they lack is the courage and confidence to pursue their conclusions to their logical outcome.
▪ It was the logical outcome of the tactics of drawing out opposing defenders originally outlined by Chapman at Northampton.
place
▪ It is because evil spirits do not fit - have no logical place or space - into the modern scientific world-view.
▪ If you want to provide a true benefit to kids, the logical place is in the libraries....
▪ It was a logical place to build a city.
▪ Nursery is the logical place to start.
positivism
▪ Was there such a state as logical positivism?
process
▪ Lind's simple and logical process should have swept through medicine, brushing aside the accumulated hocus-pocus of centuries.
▪ Both adults and adolescents with formal operations reason using the same logical processes.
▪ Design is never an isolated logical process.
progression
▪ So it is kinder to your audience if your shots follow a logical progression.
▪ There is, however a logical progression from present finance functions through to further developments.
▪ Does the shot form part of a logical progression within the group?
▪ Extending our name to accessories is a natural and logical progression.
▪ Use a logical progression or a system radiating out from a central base.
▪ The logical progression was for Wiwa to continue his father's struggle.
▪ This would be the next logical progression in the organisation of caring services in Britain.
▪ With hindsight, the emergence of any new branch of science seems inevitable, and its development a logical progression.
reason
▪ But when he thought back, there was no logical reason whatsoever why she should do such a thing.
▪ There is a perfectly logical reason why it seems so pointless and confusing.
▪ Is there any logical reason this should give a good fit?
▪ We feel very strongly, technically, that there were very logical reasons to do it.
▪ There is no logical reason why this should be so.
▪ Despite these logical reasons for the Lions to roll down the field, they went nowhere in the first half.
▪ There is, however, no logical reason why a vaccine for protection against tuberculosis should contain species specific antigens.
▪ A more logical reason for his drowning is religious and political differences.
sequence
▪ The content of the programme should follow a logical sequence.
▪ The system illustrated here follows a logical sequence of development resulting in a short-term financial planning and cash budgeting system.
▪ A good letter writer will place in a logical sequence the matter about which he or she intends to write.
▪ When possible list items in order of importance or in terms of logical sequence.
▪ These are then linked together in a set logical sequence to teach the beginner continuity of movement.
▪ The documentation for Quattro Pro also features plenty of screenshots, and follows a logical sequence similar to that of SuperCalc.
▪ Maintain a logical sequence of events - a storyline.
▪ It should enable collections in the main building to be rearranged in a more logical sequence.
step
▪ While the logical steps in the argument are acceptable, there are a number of difficulties.
▪ Her next logical step would be to begin studying when the summer was over.
▪ Of course, such insistence on exploring the logical steps of design and analysis may seem a gospel of perfection.
▪ In Brown v. Board of Education, which dealt specifically with elementary education, the Court took the final logical step.
▪ A further logical step is to consider the provision of specially adapted housing.
▪ So the next logical step is to take a look at how to install, run and remove applications from Windows.
▪ Pericles' next logical step was to get a power-base.
▪ In this model the planning and teaching process is analysed into a sequence of logical steps.
structure
▪ Inevitably this raises a question about the logical structure of existential propositions in general.
▪ The mind-stuff of strong Al is the logical structure of an algorithm.
▪ The way in which the logical structure of a passage is perceived by different readers can differ enormously.
▪ In this chapter, we will examine the logical structure of these statements in more detail.
▪ We aimed to produce models with a clear logical structure, without depending on overly idealised assumptions.
▪ Let us begin by taking a closer look at the logical structure of referential symbols.
▪ It indicates the possibility, indeed the need, to generalise logical structures to take account of such peculiarities.
▪ It then goes on to describe a scheme for representing appearance through logical structure.
thing
▪ So I did the logical thing - for a gambler, that is.
▪ But it really is a logical thing to happen.
▪ Zeno ... It's the logical thing to do, now; it's what I ought to do.
▪ That was the first logical thing to consider when you looked at Kiki.
▪ The logical thing would have been to admit defeat.
thought
▪ It is often said that chess helps broaden the mind, promoting logical thought and forward planning.
▪ During these years, the child develops the ability to apply logical thought to concrete problems in the present. 4.
▪ He was thinking while he listened to the logical thought processes of Leon Gusev.
▪ Whereas concrete operational thought is logical thought, it is restricted to the concrete world.
▪ Piaget's work is important because it provided one of the first developmental accounts of the emergence of logical thought.
▪ The adolescent, in a sense, is possessed by his or her new-found powers of logical thought.
▪ But the trauma of even comparatively simple surgery can cause some people to experience short-term problems with memory and logical thought.
▪ The adolescent is emboldened with an egocentric belief in the omnipotence of logical thought.
way
▪ However, their memories do not work in a logical way like ours, but in an emotional fashion and by association.
▪ Or perhaps it is a logical way of testing the water.
▪ The best clue to the source of the error is that software tends to fail in logical ways.
▪ It is, in sum, that consciousness is not adequately conceived in the given causal and logical ways.
▪ The logical way is to try to sort them out.
▪ I say that because I think it's the logical way free rock climbing will progress.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a logical error
▪ a logical explanation
▪ As I wanted to travel to other countries, studying languages was the logical choice.
▪ If they did not leave until yesterday, then it is logical to assume that they will arrive some time tomorrow.
▪ If you took the anti-war arguments to their logical conclusion, you would destroy all weapons.
▪ It seemed logical to start by visiting the scene of the crime.
▪ Joe's very sharp and logical when it comes to money matters.
▪ Men often accuse women of not being logical.
▪ She's a clear and logical thinker.
▪ Taking the job seemed like the logical thing to do at the time.
▪ There is no logical reason for teaching boys and girls separately.
▪ This is the logical place to build a new airport.
▪ Your essay ought to take the form of a logical argument.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A logical net searches while learning, so its learning process is slower than that of Wisard.
▪ All she wanted was to feel, to bring this overwhelming sensation of physical pleasure to its logical conclusion.
▪ I listen to their input and make logical decisions.
▪ It's not what you would say was logical but it is very complex.
▪ It seems more logical to reposition the White knight with 24 d2.
▪ State regulation protective of fetal life after viability thus has both logical and biological justifications.
▪ The logical development would be for closer examination of early foetuses with a view to detecting minor deficiencies which many babies are born with.