OK, need to re-word that a bit due to restrictions on asking a question on this site. If only we could use commas and other characters.
"Is a hypothesis, the phrase immediately following the word 'then', called the hypothesis of a statement?"
No, the phrase immediately following the word "then" is the conclusion. They hypothesis is the phrase following the word "if".
However, answering the rest of the question, the hypothesis would be called the hypothesis of a statement.
It is called a hypothesis.
Hypothesis followed by a conclusion is called an If-then statement or a conditional statement.
A tentative descriptive statement of the relationship between the variables is called hypothesis
by switching the truth values of the hypothesis and conclusion, it is called the contrapositive of the original statement. The contrapositive of a true conditional statement will also be true, while the contrapositive of a false conditional statement will also be false.
'THEORY'
In order for a statement to be called a scientific hypothesis, it must be specific and testable.
It is called a hypothesis.
It is called a hypothesis.
False, a statement that can be tested is a hypothesis. In a hypothesis "if...then..." format, one is presenting a possible solution to a question. A law is a proven statement or idea.
It is called a hypothesis.
The statement in which the hypothesis becomes the conclusion and vice-versa is called the Converse.
hypothesis
Hypothesis
Hypothesis followed by a conclusion is called an If-then statement or a conditional statement.
hypothesis
hypothesis
Its called a Hypothesis.