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corollary: msg#00026

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Subject: corollary

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The Word of the Day for September 27 is:

corollary \KOR-uh-lair-ee\ noun
1 : a deduction from a proposition already proved true
*2 : something that naturally follows : result
3 : something that incidentally or naturally accompanies or parallels

Example sentence:
As a corollary of the factory shutdown, a number of people are struggling
financially.

Did you know?
"Corollary" comes from the Late Latin noun "corollarium," which can be
translated as "a garland given as a reward." "Corollarium" comes from the Latin
"corolla," meaning "small crown or garland." If you know that a garland or
small crown was sometimes given to actors in addition to their pay, it makes
sense that another sense of "corollarium" is "gratuity." Later, "corollarium"
developed the philosophical sense of a supplementary proposition that follows
directly from one that has been proved. (You can think of a corollary as a
"bonus" that follows from the proof of something else.) The broader modern
sense, "something that naturally follows,? evolved from the philosophical one.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.





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