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postulate
[ verb pos-chuh-leyt; noun pos-chuh-lit, -leyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to ask, demand, or claim.
- to claim or assume the existence or truth of, especially as a basis for reasoning or arguing.
- to assume without proof, or as self-evident; take for granted.
Synonyms: conjecture, presuppose, hypothecate
- Mathematics, Logic. to assume as a postulate.
noun
- something taken as self-evident or assumed without proof as a basis for reasoning.
Synonyms: conjecture, assumption, axiom, theory, hypothesis
- Mathematics, Logic. a proposition that requires no proof, being self-evident, or that is for a specific purpose assumed true, and that is used in the proof of other propositions; axiom.
- a fundamental principle.
- a necessary condition; prerequisite.
postulate
verb
- to assume to be true or existent; take for granted
- to ask, demand, or claim
- to nominate (a person) to a post or office subject to approval by a higher authority
noun
- something taken as self-evident or assumed as the basis of an argument
- a necessary condition or prerequisite
- a fundamental principle
- logic maths an unproved and indemonstrable statement that should be taken for granted: used as an initial premise or underlying hypothesis in a process of reasoning
postulate
/ pŏs′chə-lĭt /
- See axiom
postulate
- A statement accepted as true for the purposes of argument or scientific investigation; also, a basic principle. ( See axiom .)
Derived Forms
- ˌpostuˈlation, noun
Other Words From
- postu·lation noun
- postu·lation·al adjective
- re·postu·late verb (used with object) repostulated repostulating
- re·postu·late noun
- repos·tu·lation noun
- un·postu·lated adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of postulate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of postulate1
Example Sentences
The physicists postulate that the color-charged black holes could have affected the balance of fusing nuclei, in a way that astronomers might someday detect with future measurements.
It has since been postulated that so-called cognitive reserve might account for this differential protective effect in individuals.
The research is anchored in a theory postulating that emotions are generated when human cognition evaluates events from various perspectives.
"We could postulate that about 80 percent of humans stand up in a similar way. Then we designed a controller around that trajectory."
This idea postulates that brain rhythms organize the otherwise massive number of possible outcomes that could result from, say, 1,000 neurons engaging in independent spiking activity.
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