entailment

[ en-teyl-muh nt ]
/ ɛnˈteɪl mənt /

noun

the act or fact of entailing, or involving by necessity or as a consequence: The logical entailment of this approach is that the right way to design a curriculum is to make it free of bias.
something involved as a necessary part or consequence of something: Long hours of work are an entailment of the job.
Linguistics. a relationship between two sentences such that if the first is true, the second must also be true, as in Her son drives her to work every day and Her son knows how to drive.

Origin of entailment

OTHER WORDS FROM entailment

pre·en·tail·ment, noun

Words nearby entailment

Example sentences from the Web for entailment

British Dictionary definitions for entailment

entailment
/ (ɪnˈteɪlmənt) /

noun

the act of entailing or the condition of being entailed
philosophy logic
  1. a relationship between propositions such that one must be true if the others are
  2. a proposition whose truth depends on such a relationshipUsual symbol: See fish-hook (def. 2)