hypothesis
Secularism
The word hypothesis means the expected outcome of the experiment. Think of it as an educated guess or explanation of what you think will happen in your experiment based on what you have learned about your subject. It consists of two parts. Part one is the hypothesis statement. You make your hypothesis statement by rewriting your problem as a statement and adding the "answer" to it. BE SPECIFIC! Part two is a short explanation of the scientific reasoning for your hypothesis. And that is your answer for hypothesis!!
words like “violence“ and “bloodshed” give the excerpt a threatening tone
Nape is the back part of the neck.
goes
The part of a conditional statement following the word "then" is the consequent. It is the action or outcome that will occur if the condition specified in the statement is met.
The most common word that signals a conditional statement is "if." It is used to introduce a condition that needs to be met in order for a certain action or result to follow.
That is correct.
Yes, but they can be rewritten. The conditional statement "If it rains then I will get wet" can be written as "I will get wet if it rains" so that the sentence does not begin with if. In logic, these conditional sentences are also equivalents to "I will not get wet or it rains", which does not contain the word "if".
Disjunction
"Can be" together is a two word verb, specifically a conditional present tense of "be".
OK, need to re-word that a bit due to restrictions on asking a question on this site. If only we could use commas and other characters."Is a hypothesis, the phrase immediately following the word 'then', called the hypothesis of a statement?"No, the phrase immediately following the word "then" is the conclusion. They hypothesis is the phrase following the word "if".However, answering the rest of the question, the hypothesis would be called the hypothesis of a statement.
Secularism
Pasy is an unreal word, that is conditional on not using it as a proper noun.
The word thesis is a noun. It is a statement that is supported by various arguments.
Matter :)
conditional sentence