A definitional argument is (usually a English essay or something along those lines) a essay where you have to define something and then say that your topic fits with the criteria that needs to be met. For example, lets say if my topic was if NASCAR racing should be a sport. I'd have to define what a sport is, and see if NASCAR fits the criteria it is. Another example would be if love is a addiction to some people. I'd have to try and define what a addiction is, and how (or how not) love can end up as a addiction. Hope this helped!
It is a definitional statement for a variable T.
That is one of the definitional aspects of a square.
Show how a footnote is shown for a definition the the text of a research paper?
Some functions are only defined for certain values of the argument. For example, the the logarithm is defined for positive values. The inverse function is defined for all non-zero numbers. Sometimes the range determines the domain. If you are restricted to the real numbers, then the domain of the square root function must be the non-negative real numbers. In this way, there are definitional domains and ranges. You can then chose any subset of the definitional domain to be your domain, and the images of all the values in the domain will be the range.
No. It doesn't meet the definitional requirements of a mineral. See link below.
It is a definitional requirement. If any face is not flat, then it is not a polyhedron.
This is simply definitional. A Muslim is, by definition, a follower of Islam, just as a Christian, by definition, is a follower of Christianity.
It is a definitional thing. Counting numbers are whole numbers (integers) starting with 1.
It is an order which may be implied by definitions or by the number themselves. For example, BIDMAS (or PEMDAS for the US) is a definitional hierarchy. The coordinates of a point is a definitional one: the X coordinate (abscissa) comes first, then the Y coordinate (ordinate). If the space is of three or more dimensions, the Z-coordinate follows and then w, and so on.Numerical hierarchy is simply putting the numbers in order of size.
A counter argument is an argument made against another argument.
Passing an argument by value means that the method that receives the argument can not change the value of the argument. Passing an argument by reference means that the method that receives the argument can change the value of the incoming argument, and the argument may be changed in the orignal calling method.
Argument Deductive argument Inductive Argument Analogy