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  1. PREMISE definition: 1. an idea or theory on which a statement or action is based: 2. to base a theory, argument, etc…. Learn more.

  2. The meaning of PREMISE is a proposition antecedently supposed or proved as a basis of argument or inference; specifically : either of the first two propositions of a syllogism from which the conclusion is drawn.

  3. PREMISE meaning: 1. an idea or theory on which a statement or action is based: 2. to base a theory, argument, etc…. Learn more.

  4. A premise is something that you suppose is true and that you use as a basis for developing an idea. [ formal ] The premise is that schools will work harder to improve if they must compete.

  5. Premise definition: a proposition supporting or helping to support a conclusion.. See examples of PREMISE used in a sentence.

  6. A premise is what forms the basis of a theory or a plot. When you called 911 on the guy in your back yard, it was on the premise that he was a thief and not the meter-reader. In logic, the premise is the basic statement upon whose truth an argument is based.

  7. a statement or an idea that forms the basis for a reasonable line of argument. the basic premise of her argument. The argument rests on a false premise. His reasoning is based on the premise that all people are equally capable of good and evil.

  8. Definitions of 'premise'. 1. The premises of a business or an institution are all the buildings and land that it occupies in one place. [...] 2. A premise is something that you suppose is true and that you use as a basis for developing an idea. [formal] [...] More.

  9. premise n /ˈprɛmɪs/. Also: premiss a statement that is assumed to be true for the purpose of an argument from which a conclusion is drawn. vb /prɪˈmaɪz; ˈprɛmɪs/. ( when tr, may take a clause as object) to state or assume (a proposition) as a premise in an argument, theory, etc.

  10. It is based on the premises that there is one right thing to do and one right way to do it. From The Atlantic. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.

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