consecution
English
Etymology
Middle English consecucioun (“attainment”), from Latin consecutio (“effect, proper sequence, attainment”), from past participle of consequor (“to follow, result, reach”)
Noun
consecution (countable and uncountable, plural consecutions)
- (archaic) A following, or sequel; actual or logical dependence.
- Sir M. Hale
- Some consecutions are so intimately and evidently connexed to or found in the premises, that the conclusion is attained, and without any thing of ratiocinative progress
- Sir M. Hale
- (obsolete) A succession or series of any kind.
- 1664, Isaac Newton, David Brewster, editor, Memoirs of the life, writings and discoveries of Sir Isaac Newton, published 1855, page 159:
- there shall be generated such a consecution of colours, whose order, from the thin end towards the thick, shall be yellow, red, purple, blue, green, and these so often repeated
-
- (archaic) Sequence.
- (logic) The relation of consequent to antecedent.
- (music) A succession of similar intervals in harmony.
Usage notes
- This word is used in logic, linguistics and computing to refer to the relation of a consequent to an antecedent.
- Its other senses are obsolete. Use of the word today in those senses is generally an error made by non-native speakers: words like "consequence" and "sequence" are more likely to be understood.
Synonyms
- (sequence): See Thesaurus:sequence
Related terms
Translations
sequel — see sequel
succession — see succession
sequence — see sequence
(logic) relation of consequent to antecedent
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References
- consecution in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- consecution in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
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