consequent to
The synonym could be following, consequent, successive, or succeeding.(note: consequent implies cause and effect)
Either is correct depending upon the usage. Reminisce is a verb. Upon and about are prepositions.Upon can be used in lieu of on the occasion of; such as in the sentence, "She likes to reminisce upon her child's first Christmas."About is often used as a substitute for of, concerning, and in regard to; such as in the sentence, "They often reminisce about their wedding day."
From thefreedictionary:1.a. Following as a natural effect, result, or conclusion: tried to prevent an oil spill and the consequent damage to wildlife.
This is technically correct, as the "politeness rule" states that I and me go last, but a proper style could still be "me and my family". As an object pronoun, "me" is correct, and the sentence would be clearer as "upon me and upon my family." Also, since there is an understood I (I thank you), it could alternately be stated "upon my family and myself".Subjective and Objective PronounsTo clarify the subjective from the objective in a compound form, take out the other words, leaving only the pronoun. Example : In the sentence "My sister and (I, me) like to go hiking", remove my sister to see which form sounds correct, me like to go or I like to go. So here "bestowed upon me" is correct.
The correct spellings are 'esophagus' or 'oesophagus' depending upon if you are in the US or UK respectively.
"Upon" is correct. It is a more formal term for "on."Mary called upon her friendI sat upon my horse.Once upon a time, . . .Apon is not in the English dictionary.
The adverb form for the adjective consequent is consequently.
No, affirming the consequent is not a valid form of reasoning.
Consequent means "as a result" - in mathematics as well as in ordinary English.
The antecedent is the "if" part of a conditional statement, while the consequent is the "then" part. The antecedent is the condition that must be met for the consequent to occur.
In logic, an antecedent is a statement that comes before another statement, known as the consequent. The antecedent is a condition or premise that, if true, leads to the consequent being true as well. In other words, the antecedent is the "if" part of an "if-then" statement, while the consequent is the "then" part.
It is 911.
Yes upon is correct in a tall tale
In a conditional statement, the antecedent is the condition that must be met for the consequent to occur. The antecedent is like the "if" part of the statement, while the consequent is the "then" part that follows if the condition is satisfied.
In conditional statements, the antecedent is the condition that must be met for the consequent to occur. The antecedent is like the "if" part of the statement, while the consequent is the "then" part that follows if the condition is satisfied.
That is correct, all 3 keys will start upon the first installation.
No, it is correct grammar, not a correct grammar.