That is called the halo effect; judging all things in a category by one single attribute.
If im right Rafael discovers that the man he saw earlier was not Ines' father it was her husband. Another answer is that Rafael hadn't known what was happening to Ines when she was bleeding until later when he was told that she was having a miscarriage of her no longer baby.
Arbitrarily describes the manner in which something's carried out, or done. The manner brooks no argument, objection, or reasoning. It's completely one-sided, being based upon personal influences and prejudices, and not upon reason or established and respected historical precedent. Another word for it may be capriciously.
bawl, bellow, call, cheer, complain, cry, holler, hoot, howl, lament, roar, scream, screech, shout, shriek, shrill, squawk, squeal, ululate, vociferate, wail, weep, whoop, yap, yelp, yip
Assuming you are talking about inductive reasoning(excluding the mathematical "proof by induction"), it is the drawing of a generalized conclusion based on what you already know. For Example: All the Ice I have seen so far is cold, (previous knowledge) Therefore all ice is cold. (Generalized conclusion) Another example is: All Cats I have seen walk on four legs, therefore all cats walk on 4 legs.
One for another
It is "deduce"
Generalization
Dialectical reasoning is reasoning which proceeds in the form of a dialogue, with one person making a statement and another making a response to it, which in its turn evokes a further response.
Deductive reasoning moves from general principles to specific conclusions, while inductive reasoning moves from specific observations to broader generalizations. Deductive reasoning aims to prove a conclusion with certainty, while inductive reasoning aims to support a conclusion with probability.
declared or stated
In texting, Omsk means "on my stinking knees", which is another way of saying emphatically that you are begging someone's forgiveness. Also, it is a city in Russia.
Tell, announce.
An example of false deductive reasoning is the slippery slope fallacy, where it is argued that one event will inevitably lead to a series of negative events, without sufficient evidence to support this claim. This type of reasoning assumes that one thing will lead to another in an extreme or exaggerated way, which is not always the case in reality.
no, the runner that was passed is declared out
Circular reasoning in writing is starting to answer the question or prompt, then hopping to a slightly related subject, then another to prove that point, and another, then tying the last semi-related subject to the original subject. A little picture that might help understand another way of looking at it is here: http://abyss.uoregon.edu/~js/images/circular_reasoning.gif
If a soldier is absent long enough he will be declared a deserter.
No. Variables declared inside a scriptlet are like method local variables which are not accessible outside the scriptlet/method.