non sequuntur
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Learned borrowing from Latin non sequuntur (“they do not follow”), third-person plural form of non sequor (“I do not follow”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /nɒn sɛˈkwʊntʊə/
Noun
[edit]non sequuntur
- plural of non sequitur
- 1947 January, L. J. D. Richardson, “A Little Classics Is a Dangerous Thing”, in Greece & Rome, volume 16, number 46, Cambridge University Press:
- We cannot be told that our arguments are vitiated by a fallacy, that our quod erat demonstranda involve too many non sequuntur : we cannot even be told that our campaign represents a policy of perfections, of unattainable ne plus ultrae.
- 2001 August 29, Padraic Brown, “thee and thou [WAS: basically]”, in sci.lang (Usenet):
- What does being familiar with you have to do with it?
Fond of non sequuntur?