The corollary of the Boleyn marriage was an Act of Succession in favour of the offspring of Anne: but the Act carried with it a murderous sting.
Germ within germ, in ever smaller miniature, after the fashion of an infinite juggler's box, was the corollary logically appended to this theory of preformation and unfolding.
From which there follows the corollary that the vital condition of the organism is a fact of importance.
Such evolution is the inevitable monisticcorollary from kinetic evolution.
As a corollary to Mr. Miall's movement comes the annual Church Congress held this year at Leeds under the presidency of the Bishop of Ripon.
This alliance with pseudo-liberalism is the corollary of his alliance with Italy; both rest within and without on the revolutionary and anti-Christian principle.
But there is a corollary to this proposition, which is worthy of notice.
As a corollary to this affecting story, I may quote the case of a woman in Lauder jail, who lay there with other females on a charge of witchcraft.
But what is a further corollary of this situation?
The present fact however of the alliance between the Emperor and England, with the corollary that England must before long be at war with France, remained unaltered.
Reform was the inevitable corollary of Education, and the development of Education was of all schemes the nearest to Wolsey's heart.
The new Act was merely the logical corollary of the old one.
The corollary was the treaty of Troyes with England in the spring of 1564.
The next point with which we shall deal is the exchange of property between individuals, which is a necessary corollary of the right of property.
In one sense it might be said to be a corollary of the doctrine of just price.
As a natural corollary to this habit of mind, she was profoundly deficient in speculation or foresight.
Sensitiveness to her mother's feelings had led Jenny into wrecking her own happiness with Maurice, and even Fortune could scarcely be so fierce as to drive her mother mad on account of the pitiful corollary to that ruined love.
A necessary corollary of moral unity, established by an omnipotent State, is an evening up of social and financial conditions.
Not less radical was the second innovation, a necessary corollary of the first, viz.
The law of supply and demand is a corollary of this law.
Another proposition, a corollary of the first, is equally true.
A corollary of this system of an universal Christian society was the recognition of a supreme tribunal.
Another corollary of this universal Christian Society was that right found a protector in the common Father of the faithful; in the grand idea of a supreme chief who without employing material force judged in last resort.
This detraction of the Sultan's suzerainty is only a corollary of the Premier's indifference towards the Muslim idea of the Caliphate.
If non-co-operation is taken up in earnest, it must bring about a cessation of all other activities including the Reforms, but I decline to draw therefore the corollary that it will set back the clock of progress.
A corollaryof the abandonment of faith in God has been a paralysis of.
A corollary of the abandonment of faith in God has been a paralysis of ability to address effectively the problem of evil or, in many cases, even to acknowledge it.
He admires, differs, and occasionally formulates a corrective or corollaryas in "Gloire.
Wherefore regeneration has for its corollary reincarnation.
Now it is the slum tenement, obvious corollary of our social inequalities; next it may be the marble mansion or gilded hotel, equally obvious corollaries of the same institutional situation.
The development of such rights is not only not incompatible with security of property, but it is, in large measure, a corollary of property security.
Second, corollary to the first, citizenship papers which will enable him to return to Turkey, there to carry on business under the greater protection which such citizenship confers.
And there is a second assumption which is the corollaryof the first.
It also follows as a corollary that no peace is possible merely through a readjustment of boundaries, through compensations and annexations of territories.
A necessary corollary of the indeterminate sentence is that every State prison and penitentiary should be a reformatory, in the modern meaning of that term.
It is not an inappropriate corollary to be drawn from this that an elevated public taste will bring about a truer estimate of the value of a genuine literary product.
This is not a strained corollary to the demand for an appropriately costumed novel.
But it is a somewhat hasty corollary therefrom, and one not likely to find favour in this University, that moral laws and spiritual agencies have nothing at all to do with the history of the human race.
From the proposition that like begets only like the corollary by no means follows that mother- and daughter-cells must appear identical from the beginning.
This Corollary is related to the foregoing Proposition as the Corollary to IV.
This proposition can also be proved from the Corollary to II.
The idea of an individual thing actually existing is an individual mode of thinking, and is distinct from other modes (by the Corollary and note to Prop.
This pain is more and more fostered, if a man conceives that he is blamed by others; this may be proved in the same way as the corollary to III.
This is proved in the same way as the first corollary of the preceding proposition.
This Corollary may be illustrated by the example of a sick and a healthy man.
Its first corollary is that the relation of cause and effect is to be sought in the uninterrupted flow and connection of events and changes.
These two propositions and the corollary are all parts of one general proposition: If through a point a line is drawn cutting a circle, the product of the segments of the line is constant.
To this important proposition there is one corollary of particular interest, namely, The perpendicular from any point on a circle to a diameter is the mean proportional between the segments of the diameter.
This requires a slight but informal proof to show that it properly follows as a corollary from the postulate, but a single sentence suffices.
The usual corollary states that this perpendicular is the shortest line joining them.
This corollary is mentioned by Aristotle and is attributed to Thales, being one of the few propositions with which his name is connected.
The theorem might simply appear as a corollary under the postulate if it were of any importance to reduce the number of propositions one more.
By means of this corollary we can easily construct a line whose numerical value is the square root of any number we please.
This leads to the corollaryconcerning the lateral area of the frustum of a regular pyramid.
This leads at once to the corollary that the volume of a rectangular parallelepiped equals the product of its three dimensions, the fundamental law in the mensuration of all solids.
On the other hand, we can prove that a tangent exists, and this may properly be considered a legitimate proposition or corollary of elementary geometry.
Illustration] Another interesting application of this corollary may be seen by taking an ordinary paper protractor ACB, and fastening a plumb line at B.
He laughed and had a look at a large and splendid photograph of Miss Mangan, that had been a sort of corollary of the Dublin trousseau.
In the case of Celts and Teutons, a complete and unassailable form of dogmatics with its corollary of hieratical intolerance was the only possible system.
And yet it was no real love-death, that is to say, death following as a necessary corollary in order that love may be consummated.
Death is the inevitable corollary of supreme love.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "corollary" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.