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protasis
[ prot-uh-sis ]
noun
- Grammar. the clause expressing the condition in a conditional sentence, in English usually beginning with if. Compare apodosis.
- the first part of an ancient drama, in which the characters are introduced and the subject is proposed. Compare catastasis, catastrophe ( def 4 ), epitasis.
- (in Aristotelian logic) a proposition, especially one used as a premise in a syllogism.
protasis
/ ˈprɒtəsɪs; prɒˈtætɪk /
noun
- logic grammar the antecedent of a conditional statement, such as it rains in if it rains the game will be cancelled Compare apodosis
- (in classical drama) the introductory part of a play
Derived Forms
- protatic, adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of protasis1
Example Sentences
“Here we catch a glimpse of the subjunctive in a conditional protasis shyly rising its timorous head above the narrative parapet.”
The consequent clause or conclusion in a conditional sentence, expressing the result, and thus distinguished from the protasis or clause which expresses a condition.
Thus, in the sentence, ½Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him,¸ the former clause is the protasis, and the latter the apodosis. µ Some grammarians extend the terms protasis and apodosis to the introductory clause and the concluding clause, even when the sentence is not conditional.
Epitasis, e-pit′a-sis, n. the main action of a Greek drama, leading to the catastrophe—opp. to Protasis.
Lord Acton would have been unable to conceive the protasis.
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