logically

listen to the pronunciation of logically
English - Turkish
mantıksal olarak
mantıklı

O durumu bu kadar mantıklı bir biçimde ortaya koyarken benim ne demem gerekiyor? - What am I supposed to say when he puts it so logically?

Mantıklı düşünmek konusunda iyi değilim. - I'm not good at thinking logically.

mantığa göre
akla uygun biçimde
logic
mantık

Çok mantıklı bir düşünme tarzın var. - You have a very logical way of thinking.

Asal sayılar hayata benzer, onlar tamamen mantıksaldır fakat, eğer tüm zamanınızı onun hakkında düşünmek için harcarsanız kurallarının bulunması imkânsızdır. - Prime numbers are like life; they are completely logical, but impossible to find the rules for, even if you spend all your time thinking about it.

logical
mantıklı

O durumu bu kadar mantıklı bir biçimde ortaya koyarken benim ne demem gerekiyor? - What am I supposed to say when he puts it so logically?

Çok mantıklı bir düşünme tarzın var. - You have a very logical way of thinking.

logical
{s} mantıksal

Asal sayılar hayata benzer, onlar tamamen mantıksaldır fakat, eğer tüm zamanınızı onun hakkında düşünmek için harcarsanız kurallarının bulunması imkânsızdır. - Prime numbers are like life; they are completely logical, but impossible to find the rules for, even if you spend all your time thinking about it.

Mantıksal Dil Lojban muhtemelen zor, değil mi? - The Logical Language Lojban is probably difficult isn't it?

logical
{s} tutarlı
logical
uygun

Türkçe çok kurallı ve mantığa uygun bir dil. - Turkish is a very regular and logical language.

logic
eseme
logic
the logic of events olayların gerektirdiği
logical
{s} mantıklı (kimse)
logical
logically mantığa göre
logical
mantıklı olarak
logical
mantıka ait
logical
mantıki
logical
esemeli
logical
{s} makul
logic
yargılama gücü
logic
muhakeme kuvveti
logic
mantıklı düşünüş
logical
(Tıp) lojikal
logical
mantığa uygun

Türkçe çok kurallı ve mantığa uygun bir dil. - Turkish is a very regular and logical language.

logical
(Bilgisayar,Teknik) lojik
Logical
mantıkça
logic
mantığı
logic
mantık ilmi
logic
(isim) mantık
English - English
In a logical manner, with logic
{a} by the rules of logic, truly, fairly
according to logical reasoning; "logically, you should now do the same to him"
In a logical manner; as, to argue logically
in a logical manner; "he acted logically under the circumstances"
in a logical manner; "he acted logically under the circumstances" according to logical reasoning; "logically, you should now do the same to him
rationally, reasonably; from a logical standpoint
according to logical reasoning; "logically, you should now do the same to him
logic
A formal or informal language together with a deductive system or a model-theoretic semantics
logic
Any system of thought, whether rigorous and productive or not, especially one associated with a particular person

It's hard to work out his system of logic.

logic
The mathematical study of relationships between rigorously defined concepts and of proof of statements
logic
The study of the principles and criteria of valid inference and demonstration
logical
Reasonable
logic
the science of correct thinking
logical
capable of or characterized by clear reasoning
logic
{n} the art of reasoning with propriety
logical
{a} of or belonging to logic, conclusive
Logical
logistical
Logical
logistic
logic
(n ) the branch of mathematics that investigates the relationships between premises and conclusions of arguments
logic
A particular kind of logic is the way of thinking and reasoning about things that is characteristic of a particular type of person or particular field of activity. The plan was based on sound commercial logic. Study of inference and argument. Inferences are rule-governed steps from one or more propositions, known as premises, to another proposition, called the conclusion. A deductive inference is one that is intended to be valid, where a valid inference is one in which the conclusion must be true if the premises are true (see deduction; validity). All other inferences are called inductive (see induction). In a narrow sense, logic is the study of deductive inferences. In a still narrower sense, it is the study of inferences that depend on concepts that are expressed by the "logical constants," including: (1) propositional connectives such as "not," (symbolized as ), "and" (symbolized as ), "or" (symbolized as ), and "if-then" (symbolized as ), (2) the existential and universal quantifiers, "(x)" and "(x)," often rendered in English as "There is an x such that ..." and "For any (all) x, ...," respectively, (3) the concept of identity (expressed by "="), and (4) some notion of predication. The study of the logical constants in (1) alone is known as the propositional calculus; the study of (1) through (4) is called first-order predicate calculus with identity. The logical form of a proposition is the entity obtained by replacing all nonlogical concepts in the proposition by variables. The study of the relations between such uninterpreted formulas is called formal logic. See also deontic logic; modal logic. deontic logic fuzzy logic logic design logic many valued logic philosophy of modal logic
logic
The part of an electronic system that performs the boolean logic operations, short for logic gates or logic circuit
logic
(99/10/30) The government investigators solved the crime by analyzing the evidence and putting two and two together There was no rhyme or reason to his argument (reference: 99, Nikkei)
logic
A treatise on logic; as, Mill's Logic
logic
The logic of a conclusion or an argument is its quality of being correct and reasonable. I don't follow the logic of your argument There would be no logic in upsetting the agreements
logic
a system of reasoning
logic
the study of methods for evaluating arguments and reasoning
logic
(Greek logos,"word", "speech", "reason"), science dealing with the principles of valid reasoning and argument The study of logic is the effort to determine the conditions under which one is justified in passing from given statements, called premises, to a conclusion that is claimed to follow from them Logical validity is the characteristic of an argument that guarantees that if the premises of the argument are true then the conclusion must necessarily be true
logic
The branch of mathematics in which mathematical assertions and reasoning are studied as formal mathematical objects
logic
a method of using the symbols AND, OR, NAND, NOR, and NOT to represent the function of a circuit
logic
Mathematical treatment of formal logic whereby a system of symbols (i e , AND, OR, and NOT) is used to represent quantities and relationships A switch/gate has only two statesopen or closedallowing the use binary numbers for solutions to problems
logic
The sequence of functions performed by hardware or software Hardware logic is made up of circuits that perform an operation Software logic is the sequence of instructions in a program
logic
The art of being wrong with confidence
logic
{i} reasoning, common-sense; science of inference and reasoning
logic
A formal and powerful method of explaining why the program doesn't work
logic
a system of reasoning the principles that guide reasoning within a given field or situation; "economic logic requires it"; "by the logic of war"
logic
The science or art of exact reasoning, or of pure and formal thought, or of the laws according to which the processes of pure thinking should be conducted; the science of the formation and application of general notions; the science of generalization, judgment, classification, reasoning, and systematic arrangement; correct reasoning
logic
reasoned and reasonable judgment; "it made a certain kind of logic"
logic
the branch of philosophy that analyzes inference
logic
Logic is a method of reasoning that involves a series of statements, each of which must be true if the statement before it is true. Apart from criminal investigation techniques, students learn forensic medicine, philosophy and logic
logic
the principles that guide reasoning within a given field or situation; "economic logic requires it"; "by the logic of war"
logic
On PMTH, the word "logic" generally refers, not to the colloquial meaning of this term but to the system of formal reasoning introduced by Aristotle Aristotle's logic was based on three principles, the Law of the Excluded Middle, the Law of Contradiction and the Law of Identity In recent times there are symbolic logics which can be more complex In Aristotelian, or categorical, logic, a statement can be only true or false, not both at the same time In modern logics, there can be alternative valuations of a statement In fuzzy logic, we can speak of the proportion of truth in each statement
logic
A system of interconnected components used to transmit motion and force and provide discrete locking functions
logic
One of the three major classes of ICs: microprocessors, memory and logic Logic is used for data manipulation and control functions
logic
the study of the laws of thought and forms of argument
logic
A method of human thought that involves thinking in a linear, step-by-step manner about how a problem can be solved. Logic is the basis of many principles including the scientific method
logic
Logic is a character that was based on Isaac Bender and replaced the other charter based on him, the Kabalistic mage Logic represents the ordered and cerebral side of the mind He seeks to influence characters to logic at the cost of emotion and morality The character is opposed to and often shown with Morality and Hate, as the people they were based on were all roommates of mine along with Isaac In the storyline, some of Logic's accomplishments include fighting with Strength, being taken prisoner by Love and trying to dissuade the Emperor from listening to the Traitor Logic is shown wearing a black robe due to his inspiration's own dark visage He is often shown holding a card with a formula of some sort and math is often the language of logic and he is often shown speaking in binary as it is one of the simplest ways of communicating (theoretically)
logic
A collection of circuit elements that perform a function, especially a set of elements that use digital logic and perform Boolean logic functions (SM*)
logic
The rules whereby valid conclusions may be derived from a given set of axioms Also the rules for dialogue, section 15 11
logic
Decision Matrix
logic
The science of thinking based on laws that determine the validity of a conclusion (Solso)
logic
Sound reasoning and the formal laws of reasoning
logic
During program design, processing requirements identified by the systems analysis for each program in the system 11 27
logic
Genus: An art or process Differentia: Removing or preventing contradictions in one's thoughts or ideas Link: Article
logic
The principles of right reasoning
logic
The study of the most general truths -- those truths which are independent of any particular subject matter
logic
reasoned and reasonable judgment; "it made a certain kind of logic" a system of reasoning the principles that guide reasoning within a given field or situation; "economic logic requires it"; "by the logic of war" the branch of philosophy that analyzes inference
logic
Series of well-supported assumptions
logical
A feature not physically present, but applied by software Sectors on a hard disk are physically arranged contiguously; logically, sectors may be placed anywhere on a hard disk, requiring a software program to arrange them in the correct order
logical
In agreement with the principles of logic
logical
capable of or reflecting the capability for correct and valid reasoning; "a logical mind"
logical
A data type that can take only two values, Yes or No in the case of Microsoft Access
logical
Of or pertaining to logic
logical
An abstraction of something real A logical disk, for example, can be an abstraction of a large disk that is really made of several small disks
logical
Representation of something that might or might not be the same in its actual physical form For example, a hard disk can occupy one physical drive, yet you can divide the available storage on it to appear to the user as if it were in several different drives These apparent drives are the logical drives
logical
{s} based on logic; reasonable; simulated, looks and acts like the real thing but is not genuine (Computers)
logical
The manifestation of physical devices in software, including operating systems For example, a logical disk drive may consist of a part of the space on a single disk drive or, using Windows NT's capability of spanning drives, space on multiple disk drives
logical
Something that is logical seems reasonable or sensible in the circumstances. Connie suddenly struck her as a logical candidate There was a logical explanation It is logical to take precautions. = reasonable + logically logi·cal·ly This was the one possibility I hadn't taken into consideration, though logically I should have done
logical
Of or pertaining to logic; used in logic; as, logical subtilties
logical
one of Kant's four main perspectives, aiming to establish a kind of knowledge which is both analytic and a priori Hence it is concerned with nothing but the relationships between concepts The law of noncontradiction (A is not -A) is the fundamental law of traditional, Aristotelian logic (If we call this 'analytic' logic, then 'synthetic' logic would be based on the oppo貞ite law of 'contradiction' [A is -A] ) 'All bachelors are unmarried' is a typical logical statement (Cf hypothetical )
logical
part of the physical-logical-virtual trilogy of indirection that describes the conceptual cybernetic movement from Real Space to Cyberspace, "logical" describes the way automata re-order and describe the parts of physical reality that they deal with (language=American technical jargon) According to cue/www=http: //webopedia internet com/TERM/l/logical html: "(1) Refers to a user's view of the way data or systems are organized The opposite of logical is physical, which refers to the real organization of a system For example, a logical description of a file is that it is a collection of data stored together This is the way files appear to users Physically, however, a single file can be divided into many pieces scattered across a disk "
logical
According to the rules of logic; as, a logical argument or inference; the reasoning is logical
logical
Able to reason deductively from what has gone before
logical
capable of or reflecting the capability for correct and valid reasoning; "a logical mind" based on known statements or events or conditions; "rain was a logical expectation, given the time of year
logical
When used to describe a graphics object (such as a font or brush), this means that the object described is an "ideal" object Information about the logical object is used by the system to create a physical object which may not exactly match the logical one However, only physical objects can actually be used Back
logical
capable of thinking and expressing yourself in a clear and consistent manner; "a lucid thinker"; "she was more coherent than she had been just after the accident"
logical
based on known statements or events or conditions; "rain was a logical expectation, given the time of year"
logical
A name you can use in place of or as part of a file specification These names are easier to remember and type than the full file specification
logical
– Characteristics of objects and methods that are apparent to users and/or application programs, as opposed to the physical objects and methods upon which they are based
logical
A pattern of reasoning, its structure or grammar, as distinguished from the content If A is >B, and B is >C, then A is >C
logical
marked by an orderly, logical, and aesthetically consistent relation of parts; "a logical argument"; "the orderly presentation"
logical
In a logical argument or method of reasoning, each step must be true if the step before it is true. Only when each logical step has been checked by other mathematicians will the proof be accepted. + logically logi·cal·ly My professional training has taught me to look at things logically
logical
(log·i·cal) Pronunciation: 'läj-i-k&l Function: adjective : being in agreement with what may be reasonably expected <a logical result of an action> - log·i·cal·ly /-k(&-)lE/ adverb - log·i·cal·ness /-k&l-n&s/ noun
logical
(e g Karl Popper)- Are scientific theories confirmed by the evidence available? Are they falsifiable? Do they have the ability to predict novel phenomena?
logical
based on known statements or events or conditions; "rain was a logical expectation, given the time of year
logical
The logical conclusion or result of a series of facts or events is the only one which can come from it, according to the rules of logic. If the climate gets drier, then the logical conclusion is that even more drought will occur a society that dismisses God as a logical impossibility. + logically logi·cal·ly From that it followed logically that he would not be meeting Hildegarde
logical
1 The way your computer "thinks" about the devices attached to it For example, one physical hard disk may be partitioned into two or more "logical" disks 2 The way Mr Spock thinks about anything >: -
logical
in accordance with reason or logic; "a logical conclusion"
logical
Skilled in logic; versed in the art of thinking and reasoning; as, he is a logical thinker
logically

    Hyphenation

    lo·gi·cal·ly

    Turkish pronunciation

    läcîkli

    Pronunciation

    /ˈläʤəklē/ /ˈlɑːʤɪkliː/

    Etymology

    () logical +‎ -ly

    Videos

    ... but but most most people actually accept this logically ...
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