corollary - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of corollary in Hindi

  • परिणाम
  • उपप्रमेय
  • स्वाभाविक परिणाम
  • उपनिगमन

corollary Definition

Noun

  • a proposition that follows from (and is often appended to) one already proved.


Adjective

  • forming a proposition that follows from one already proved.

corollary Example

  • Once the divorce was finalized, Jo had to deal with the corollary of depression and self-doubt that followed.  ( एक बार तलाक को अंतिम रूप देने के बाद, जो को अवसाद और आत्म-संदेह के परिणाम से निपटना पड़ा। )
  • As a corollary of splitting the company into two separate parts that provided different services, many former customers canceled their subscriptions.   ( कंपनी को अलग-अलग सेवाएं प्रदान करने वाले दो अलग-अलग हिस्सों में विभाजित करने के परिणाम के रूप में, कई पूर्व ग्राहकों ने अपनी सदस्यता रद्द कर दी। )
  • As a corollary to reorganization, the three brigade plan was now put tentatively into operation. ( पुनर्गठन के परिणाम के रूप में, तीन ब्रिगेड योजना को अब अस्थायी रूप से परिचालन में लाया गया था। )
  • The old man was wealthy, and a miser, each of which characteristics may be corollary to the other. ( बूढ़ा आदमी धनी और कंजूस था, जिनमें से प्रत्येक विशेषता दूसरे के लिए अनुवांशिक हो सकती है। ) 

More Sentence

  • But Del went a step farther, and drew the corollary that St. Vincent was the cause of it all.
  • In his mind it followed as a corollary that they were also hostile to him, as he was hostile to them.
  • But the character is not a corollary of marriage, if the proper conditions were present when the wife was a young woman.
  • The ethical theories which are corollary to the tendencies expounded above, range from extreme egoism to a mystical universalism.
  • The commission is the proper corollary to it; and so many parents of ill-educated boys appear to think.
  • Britain's one and only nightmare is money, and its corollary aspects, exchange and credit.
  • The corollary drawn from this is, that they have therefore a manifest right to immediate representation in Congress.
  • In this time of parents who work long hours on demanding jobs, the corollary is a generation of children who have been spoiled by material things.  
  • Gabriel was delighted to find that being on the invitation lists for more parties was an unexpected corollary of his hobby as an amateur magician.
  • the huge increases in unemployment were the corollary of expenditure cuts
  • The hour of Bestuzhev's triumph coincided with the peace congress of Aixla-Chapelle, which altered the whole situation of European politics and introduced fresh combinations, the breaking away of Prussia from France and a rapprochement between England and Prussia, with the inevitable corollary of an alliance between France and the enemies of Prussia.
  • The above construction for Z is a corollary of the general theorem given in 127.
  • § 99a (3rd ed., 1892), where the expression in question is deduced as a corollary of Green's theorem.
  • And I think that helps explain why no one quite foresaw the rise of the Internet: because it doesn't have an offline corollary of its own.
  • With grammatical precision, antiquarian learning and critical discernment Origen combines the allegorical method of interpretation - the logical corollary of his conception of the inspiration of the Scriptures.
  • As a corollary of this he founded in 1875 the "Hebrew Union College" in the same city, and this institution has since trained a large number of the rabbis of America.
  • constructing a square of twice the area of a given square (which follows as a corollary to the Pythagorean property of a right-angled triangle, viz.
  • As a human person, I am body and soul; and the idealistic identification of the Ego with soul or mind, involving the corollary that my body belongs to the non-Ego and is no part of myself, is the reductio ad absurdum of idealism.
  • A corollary to this system was the much needed reform of the Polish constitution, without which nothing beneficial was to be expected from any political combination.
  • The caucus, which is the natural corollary of the detachment, determines by majority the vote of the whole of the members of the party, independence of action being allowed on minor questions only.
  • Congregationalism, however, " denotes a positive theory of the organization and powers of Christian churches," having as corollary independency of external control, whether civil or ecclesiastical.
  • the court did not answer a corollary question