10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SYLLOGIZER»
Discover the use of
syllogizer in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
syllogizer and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The British Magazine and Monthly Register of Religious and ...
Vague, indeed, must be the syllogizer's notions of logic! The two statements are
rhetorical elxé-ra, one of which asserts of men (i.e., mankind in general) that they
are mostly, probably, 15; érrl r6 rrohr'njl; liars; the other, that they are mostly, ...
... by the thicker part of the cloud, to step back and worship." f It were easy to
shew that Mr. Newman is not infallible in other matters. Page 37, he observes : —
" A pure syllogizer would look on tbe two statements, that ' most men are liars ...
Hugh James Rose, Samuel Roffey Maitland, 1838
3
The British Magazine and Monthly Register of Religious and ...
Page 37, he observes : — " A pure syllogizer would look on the two statements,
that ' most men are liars,' and 'very few men are liars,' as meaning the same
identical thing, both being merged under the vaguer proposition, that ' some men
are ...
Hugh James Rose, Samuel Roffey Maitland, 1838
4
Lloyd's Encyclopædic dictionary
syke—. syllogizer. 723 tte, of uncertain composition, but supposed to be related
to stilbite (q.v.). Named by Bhepard. syke, sike, s. [Icel. tik = a ditch, a trench.] A
small rill, commonly running out of a quagmire ; a Bniall rill without sand or gravel
.
5
International Encyclopædic Dictionary: A New Original and ...
syllogizer. 4583 tte, of uncertain composition, but supposed to be related to
stilbite (q.v.). Named by Shepard. □yke, nice, *. [Icel. sik = a ditch, a trench.] A
small rill, commouly running out of a quagmire ; a small rill without sand or gravel.
Robert Hunter, Charles Morris, 1897
6
The Encyclopaedic Dictionary: A New Original Work of ...
syllogizer. 723. ite, of uncertain coini^osition, but supposed to be related to
stilbite (q.v.). Named by Shepard. sykc, sikc, a. [Icel. sik = a ditch, a trench.] A Kin:
ill rill, commonly running out of a quagmire ; a sm ill rill without sand or gravel. (
Scotch.) ...
7
Universal Dictionary of the English Language: A New and ...
Mim: A green mineral substaan found in cavities in s porphyritic amygdaloidsl
dolorsyke—syllogizer / 4588 lte, of uncertain composition, but supposed to be. or.
worn, wolf. woo-k, whb, son; mite, cub, cure, unite, cir, rifle, “in: try. Sir-inn. so. as ...
Robert Hunter, Charles Morris, 1900
This forces the syllogizer to propound another syllogisrn in order to prove his
major premiss, only to find that his new major is once more questioned, and he is
called upon to 'prove z/zct.' The process can be carried on until the ingenuity and
...
9
Formal logic, a scientific and social problem
This forces the syllogizer to propound another syllogism in order to prove his
major premiss, only to find that his new major is once more questioned, and he is
called upon to ' prove that' The process can be carried on until the ingenuity and
...
Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller, 1912
10
The Anglo-American Encyclopedia and Dictionary: Dictionary ...
266. (Note.) 8yT-l6-£Ize, *syT-lo-fclBe, v. i. [Fr. syllogizer; Greek syllogizomai.'] [
Syllogism.] To reason by means of syllogisms. "To teach boys to syllogise, or
frame arguments iur» refute them, without any real inward knowledge of the
question.