With+stronger+reason

  • 1A Momentary Lapse of Reason — Studio album by …

    Wikipedia

  • 2No Reason (House) — No Reason House episode Episode no. Season 2 Episode 24 Directed by David Shore …

    Wikipedia

  • 3List of Heroes characters with special abilities — This is an alphabetical list of characters with special abilities appearing in the television series Heroes as well as the Heroes graphic novels. A more extensive list of Heroes characters can be found at List of characters in Heroes . Main… …

    Wikipedia

  • 4Cider with Rosie — 1st edition (pub. Hogarth Press) Cider with Rosie is a 1959 book by Laurie Lee (published in the U.S. as Edge of Day: Boyhood in the West of England, 1960). It is the first book of a trilogy that continues with As I Walked Out One Midsummer… …

    Wikipedia

  • 5a fortiori — a for·ti·o·ri /ˌā ˌfȯr shē ōr ˌī, ˌä ˌfȯr shē ōr ē, ˌfȯr tē / adv [New Latin, from the stronger (argument)]: all the more certainly: with greater reason: with still more convincing force used in drawing a conclusion that is thought to be even… …

    Law dictionary

  • 6a fortiori — [L.] With stronger reason, for a still stronger reason, all the more, still more surely, by so much the more …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 7Latin Phrases —   Latin phrases in common use include: • ab initio From the beginning. • ad hoc For this purpose, this one only . • ad hominem To an person s interests or passions; used of an argument that takes advantage of the character of the person on the… …

    International financial encyclopaedia

  • 8A fortiori — A for ti*o ri [L.] (Logic & Math.) With stronger reason. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 9a fortiori — /ey forshiyoray/ With stronger reason; much more. A term used in logic to denote an argument to the effect that because one ascertained fact exists, therefore another, which is included in it, or analogous to it, and which is less improbable,… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 10a fortiori — /ey forshiyoray/ With stronger reason; much more. A term used in logic to denote an argument to the effect that because one ascertained fact exists, therefore another, which is included in it, or analogous to it, and which is less improbable,… …

    Black's law dictionary