flaw in reasoning

flaw in reasoning
index fallacy

Burton's Legal Thesaurus. . 2006

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • flaw´less|ness — flaw|less «FL lihs», adjective. without a flaw; perfect: »a flawless diamond, flawless reasoning. SYNONYM(S): faultless, unblemished. –flaw´less|ly, adverb. –flaw´less|ness, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • flaw´less|ly — flaw|less «FL lihs», adjective. without a flaw; perfect: »a flawless diamond, flawless reasoning. SYNONYM(S): faultless, unblemished. –flaw´less|ly, adverb. –flaw´less|ness, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • flaw|less — «FL lihs», adjective. without a flaw; perfect: »a flawless diamond, flawless reasoning. SYNONYM(S): faultless, unblemished. –flaw´less|ly, adverb. –flaw´less|ness, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • flaw — flaw1 [flô] n. [ME, a flake, scale, splinter, prob. < or akin to ON flaga, thin layer: for IE base see FLAKE1] 1. a break, scratch, crack, etc. that spoils something; blemish [a flaw in a diamond] 2. a defect; fault; error [a flaw in a legal… …   English World dictionary

  • flaw — n. 1) a fatal flaw 2) a flaw in (there s a flaw in your reasoning) * * * [flɔː] a fatal flaw a flaw in (there s a flaw in your reasoning) …   Combinatory dictionary

  • reasoning — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ careful, sound ▪ circular, faulty, flawed, specious (formal) ▪ underlying ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • fallacy — fallacy, sophism, sophistry, casuistry are comparable when meaning unsound and misleading reasoning or line of argument. The same distinctions in implications and connotations are distinguishable in the corresponding adjectives fallacious,… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • fallacy — I noun captio, deception, deceptive belief, delusion, deviation from truth, distortion, erroneous reasoning, erroneousness, error, fallacious argument, false appearance, falseness, falsity, faultiness, faulty reasoning, flaw in reasoning,… …   Law dictionary

  • learn — learnable, adj. /lerrn/, v., learned /lerrnd/ or learnt, learning. v.t. 1. to acquire knowledge of or skill in by study, instruction, or experience: to learn French; to learn to ski. 2. to become informed of or acquainted with; ascertain: to… …   Universalium

  • learn — [[t]lɜrn[/t]] v. learned [[t]lɜrnd[/t]] or learnt, learn•ing 1) to acquire knowledge of or skill in by study, instruction, or experience: to learn a new language[/ex] 2) to become informed of or acquainted with; ascertain: to learn the truth[/ex] …   From formal English to slang

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”