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is consequent
adjective
Following as a result, inference, or natural effect.
Exact(52)
The idea that debt is necessary for trade, and has to be forgiven, is consequent to the rise of a market economy.
This is what Bryars calls an "unfolding at a human rate", and it is consequent on the relative movements of different parts of the composition.
It is consequent on the study of Perspectiva.
The IF part of a rule is antecedent and the THEN part is consequent.
As Aristotle says (1984 [C4 BCE], Metaphysics, 1072a, tr. Ross): 'desire is consequent on opinion rather than opinion on desire'.
It is called "consequent" because it is consequent upon, or dependent upon, the decisions of non-divine actual entities (Whitehead calls them actual occasions).
Similar(8)
Those interests that will be damaged fundamentally with the instability and the economic difficult that's going to be consequent on the decision to withdraw".
The problems that affected patients most were in the patient contact centre, where new processes took longer than expected and there were consequent delays in responding to patients because of a backlog of work.
Parameters in this layer are said to be consequent parameters.
The operative words here are "consequent to" and "without".
In plan-driven development, there are consequent phases which are usually handled by phase-specific teams.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com