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[ US /ˌæksiəˈmætɪk/ ]
[ UK /ˌæksɪəmˈætɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to or derived from axioms
    axiomatic physics
    the postulational method was applied to geometry
  2. containing aphorisms or maxims
    axiomatic wisdom
  3. evident without proof or argument
    an axiomatic truth
    we hold these truths to be self-evident

How To Use axiomatic In A Sentence

  • Educators have also applied paper folding to such diverse mathematical objects as logical structures, axiomatic systems, and tessellations with geometrical figures.
  • It has become axiomatic in this country that children from deprived areas are destined to fail educationally.
  • The related axiomatic study of epistemic notions has benefited from application of techniques used for proving incompleteness and indefinability results since the early sixties. Paradoxes and Contemporary Logic
  • Ordinary politics adds to these familiar ideals a further one that has no distinct place in utopian axiomatic theory.
  • From a sector perspective, this means that the government's running a deficit on goods and services axiomatically translates into the rest of the economy's running a surplus. SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • It'll be all-natural and organic, of course; still, he's entering a market in which it is axiomatic that you either grow or die.
  • Therefore in speculative matters the same truth holds among all men both as to principles and as to conclusions, even though all men do not discern this truth in the conclusions but only in those principles which are called axiomatic notions. The Political Ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas
  • But it is ordinary reciprocity that good psychoanalytic practice must, axiomatically, bar from the relationship of analyst and patient.
  • There is axiomatically no such thing as a light scarf for men in Britain.
  • There is one context in which the language of possible worlds is undoubtedly useful and even illuminating, namely, in the study of formal axiomatic systems of modal logic.
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