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Webster 1913 Edition


Sequent

Se′quent

,
Adj.
[L.
sequens
,
-entis
, p. pr. of
sequi
to follow. See
Sue
to follow.]
1.
Following; succeeding; in continuance.
What to this was
sequent

Thou knowest already.
Shakespeare
2.
Following as an effect; consequent.

Se′quent

,
Noun.
1.
A follower.
[R.]
Shak.
2.
That which follows as a result; a sequence.

Webster 1828 Edition


Sequent

SE'QUENT

,
Adj.
[supra.]
1. Following; succeeding.
2. Consequential. [Little used.]

SE'QUENT

,
Noun.
A follower. [Not in use.]

Definition 2024


sequent

sequent

English

Adjective

sequent (comparative more sequent, superlative most sequent)

  1. (obsolete) That comes after in time or order; subsequent.
    • 1860, James Thomson (B.V.), Two Sonnets:
      Why are your songs all wild and bitter sad
      As funeral dirges with the orphans' cries?
      Each night since first the world was made hath had
      A sequent day to laugh it down the skies.
  2. (now rare) That follows on as a result, conclusion etc.; consequent to, on, upon.
    • c. 1604, William Shakespeare, Measure for Measure:
      But let my Triall, be mine owne Confession: / Immediate sentence then, and sequent death, / Is all the grace I beg.
    • 1897, Henry James, What Maisie Knew:
      Maisie found herself clutched to her mother's breast and passionately sobbed and shrieked over, made the subject of a demonstration evidently sequent to some sharp passage just enacted.
  3. Recurring in succession or as a series; successive, consecutive.
    • c. 1603, William Shakespeare, Othello, I.2:
      The Gallies Haue sent a dozen sequent Messengers / This very night, at one anothers heeles: / And many of the Consuls, rais'd and met, / Are at the Dukes already.

Translations

Noun

sequent (plural sequents)

  1. Something that follows in a given sequence.
    • 1946, Bertrand Russell, History of Western Philosophy, I.30:
      The One is somewhat shadowy. It is sometimes called God, sometimes the Good; it transcends Being, which is the first sequent upon the One.
  2. (logic) A disjunctive set of logical formulae which is partitioned into two subsets; the first subset, called the antecedent, consists of formulae which are valuated as false, and the second subset, called the succedent, consists of formulae which are valuated as true.[1] (The set is written without set brackets and the separation between the two subsets is denoted by a turnstile symbol, which may be read "give(s)".)
    A sequent could be interpreted to correspond to an Existential Graph, whose expression in Existential Graph Interchange Format would be
    ~[(a) (b) ~[(c)] ~[(d)]], which in ordinary language could be expressed as "a and b give c or d".
  3. (obsolete) A follower.
    • William Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost
      Sir Nathaniel, this Biron is one of the votaries with the king; and here he hath framed a letter to a sequent of the stranger queen's, which accidentally, or by the way of progression, hath miscarried.
  4. (mathematics) A sequential calculus

Translations

Related terms

References

  1. logicinaction.org, Chapter 8