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Example sentences for "deduced from"

  • But since study is an assiduous and earnest application of the mind to any particular object with intense desire, that argument which the case itself requires will easily be deduced from it.

  • Those arguments are the most suitable to conjectural discussion which can be deduced from causes, from effects, or from dependent circumstances.

  • All statements are confirmed by some argument or other, either by that which is derived from persons, or by that which is deduced from circumstances.

  • It had been handed down from Aristotle, and probably from earlier times, as an obvious truth, that the science of Geometry is deduced from definitions.

  • The moment of a magnet may also be deduced from a measurement of the couple exerted on the magnet by a uniform field H.

  • Call it illusion, but it still stands beside the true world, and demands that it be deduced from that.

  • If the Absolute is form, matter ought to be deduced from form, shown to be merely a projection and manifestation of it.

  • But they are not based in any way upon the Atomic theory, and cannot be deduced from it.

  • Capable of being inferred or deduced from premises.

  • That which is derived; anything obtained or deduced from another.

  • Pertaining to, or deduced from, construction or interpretation.

  • The question hence arises: How happens it that reason regards the possibility of all things as deduced from a single possibility, that, to wit, of the highest reality, and presupposes this as existing in an individual and primal being?

  • This law of specification cannot be deduced from experience; it can never present us with a principle of so universal an application.

  • What we wish to know is, what can be deduced from what.

  • The two passages are totally different both in sense and language, and that the use of Acts is deduced from so distant an analogy only serves to show the slightness of the evidence with which apologists have to be content.

  • If it be so, and we think it cannot be doubted, a conclusion which the total silence of the other Gospels seems to confirm, very suggestive consequences may be deduced from it.

  • That power, ruinous and fallacious as it is, is deduced from implication, for it is not expressly given.

  • Can this demonstration be deduced from experiments or from a priori considerations?

  • Without this belief, the problem of which we speak would have no meaning; interpolation would be impossible; no law could be deduced from a finite number of observations; science would not exist.

  • When a certain number of logical principles have been admitted, the rest can be deduced from them; but the propositions deduced are often just as self-evident as those that were assumed without proof.

  • It would certainly be absurd to suppose that there are innate principles in the sense that babies are born with a knowledge of everything which men know and which cannot be deduced from what is experienced.

  • In derivative knowledge our ultimate premisses must have some degree of self-evidence, and so must their connexion with the conclusions deduced from them.

  • Thus it is clear that a true belief is not knowledge when it is deduced from a false belief.

  • Conclusion is deduced from conclusion, and yet no one of common sense doubts but that these geometrical principles must find their practical application in the real world about us.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "deduced from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    bearing strata; better life; can tell; cent stamps; certain phases; complete history; deduced from; forever free; last time; mingled with; popularly called; public revenue; rank and file killed; religious enthusiasm; seventeenth century; she murmured; sitting here; speak first; stands alone; three great; wedded wife; well satisfied