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deductionadd into favorites/dɪˈdʌkʃən/
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Synonyms: answer, assumption, cogitation, concluding, consequence, consideration, contemplation, corollary, deliberation, derivation, finding, illation, inference, inferring, judgment, meditation, mulling, musing, opinion
Antonyms: confusion, addition, increase, rise

kesinti, çıkarılan miktar, Çıkarım, sonuç çıkarma, tümdengelim, sonuç, çıkarma, tümden gelim, iskonto, tenzil, indirme, netice, hesaptan düşme, (DEDUCE) Sonuç çıkarmak, türetim, dedüksiyon, tenzilat, azaltma, istidlal, indirim, man. tümdengelim, çıkarmak, istidlâl, tümdengelimli, SONUÇ ÇIKARMAK:Herhangi bir konu üzerinde, araştırma ve inceleme yapmak suretiyle bir sonuca varmak, çıkar, çikar, netice çıkarma, sonuçlar, düşmek, indirmek, deductive istintaç ve istidlâl yolunda olan, hesaptan indirmek, azaltmak, eksiltmek, istintaç etmek sonuç çıkarmak deduction istintaç, indirim yapmak, hesaptan düşmek,

1 kesinti     ts
2 çıkarılan miktar  isim     ts
3 Çıkarım     ts
4 sonuç çıkarma  isim     ts
5 tümdengelim     ts
6 sonuç     ts
7 çıkarma     ts
8 tümden gelim     ts
9 iskonto  Ticaret     ts
10 tenzil  Ticaret     ts
11 indirme     ts
12 netice     ts
13 hesaptan düşme  isim     ts
14 (DEDUCE) Sonuç çıkarmak  Askeri     ts
15 türetim     ts
16 dedüksiyon  Denizbilim     ts
17 tenzilat     ts
18 azaltma     ts
19 istidlal  Osmanlıca     ts
20 indirim     ts
21 man. tümdengelim  isim     ts
22deduct çıkarmak  fiil     ts
23deduct istidlâl     ts
24deduct tümdengelimli     ts
25deduct SONUÇ ÇIKARMAK:Herhangi bir konu üzerinde, araştırma ve inceleme yapmak suretiyle bir sonuca varmak  Askeri     ts
26deduct çıkar     ts
27deduct çikar     ts
28deduct netice çıkarma     ts
29deductions sonuçlar     ts
30deduct düşmek  fiil     ts
31deduct indirmek     ts
32deduct deductive istintaç ve istidlâl yolunda olan     ts
33deduct hesaptan indirmek     ts
34deduct azaltmak     ts
35deduct eksiltmek     ts
36deduct istintaç etmek sonuç çıkarmak deduction istintaç     ts
37deduct indirim yapmak  Ticaret     ts
38deduct hesaptan düşmek     ts
More results

A conclusion reached by this process, A process of reasoning that moves from the general to the specific, in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the premises presented, so that the conclusion cannot be false if the premises are true, A conclusion; that which is deduced, concluded or figured out, That which is deducted; that which is subtracted or removed, The ability or skill to deduce or figure out; the power of reason, A sum that can be removed from tax calculations; something that is written off, An inference from a set of propositions, or premises, to another proposition, or conclusion, that must be true if the premises are true, subtraction, reduction, discount; conclusion; method of logical reasoning in which one uses a general rule to determine individual elements, A formal logic in which specific conclusions are drawn from generalized premises, For tax purposes, the portion of an estate that does not generate tax (such as a marital deduction), an amount or percentage deducted, Any ordinary and necessary expense paid or incurred in a taxable year which is related to business or the production of income Such deductions are in addition to any other deduction Permitted by law and depend upon the accounting method used by the taxpayer Except where specifically authorized by Congress, expenses for personal or family purposes are usually not deductible A deduction has the effect of reducing the amount of taxable income and thereby reducing a taxpayer's tax liability If a person owns a house which serves as his or her personal residence, Congress permits mortgage interest, property taxes, and casualty losses as allowable deductions In addition to these deductions, owners of real estate held for other purposes may be entitled to deductions for maintenance expenses, minor repairs, insurance premiums, and depreciation, An expense that is allowable as a reduction of gross taxable income by the IRS e g , charity donations, A method of logical inference Given a cause, deduction infers all logical effects that might arise as a consequence See also: Inference, Abduction, Induction, reasoning from the general to the particular (or from cause to effect) something that is inferred (deduced or entailed or implied); "his resignation had political implications", a. a process of reasoning that moves from the general to the specific, in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the premises presented, so that the conclusion cannot be false if the premises are true, Act or process of deducing or inferring, That which is deduced or drawn from premises by a process of reasoning; an inference; a conclusion, Act of deducting or taking away; subtraction; as, the deduction of the subtrahend from the minuend, That which is deducted; the part taken away; abatement; as, a deduction from the yearly rent, Any amount taken from an employee's paycheck each pay period Deductions may include health or medical benefits, union dues, and so on, the act of reducing the selling price of merchandise, the act of subtracting (removing a part from the whole); "he complained about the subtraction of money from their paychecks", Reasoning in which the premises, if true, guarantee the truth of the conclusion Example, "All cats are mortal; Bill is a cat; therefore, Bill is mortal " Not all deduction is "from general to particular," as is sometimes said Nevertheless, the deduction of predictions of particular observable events from general hypotheses in order to test the hypotheses, is scientifically quite central Contrast: induction See also: logic, hypothetical deductive method, Business expenses or losses that are subtracted from gross income in computing taxable income, A method of reasoning by which one infers a conclusion from a set of sentences by employing the axioms and rules of inference for a given logical system See abduction, induction <Discussion> <References> Chris Eliasmith, Reasoning from the general to the specific, something that is inferred (deduced or entailed or implied); "his resignation had political implications", Deduction is the process of reaching a conclusion about something because of other things that you know to be true. a case that tested his powers of deduction, A deduction is a conclusion that you have reached about something because of other things that you know to be true. It was a pretty astute deduction, A deduction is an amount that has been subtracted from a total. your gross income, Deduction is the act or process of subtracting an amount of money from a total amount. After the deduction of tax at 20 per cent, the interest rate will be 6.2 per cent. In logic, a type of inference or argument that purports to be valid, where a valid argument is one whose conclusion must be true if its premises are true (see validity). Deduction is thus distinguished from induction, where there is no such presumption. Valid deductive arguments may have false premises, as demonstrated by the example: "All men are mortal; Cleopatra is a man; therefore, Cleopatra is mortal." Invalid deductive arguments sometimes embody formal fallacies (i.e., errors of reasoning based on the structure of the propositions in the argument); an example is "affirming the consequent": "If A then B; B; therefore, A" (see fallacy; formal and informal), a reduction in the gross amount on which a tax is calculated; reduces taxes by the percentage fixed for the taxpayer's income bracket, An inference in which (when valid) the conclusion contains no information that was not already present in the premises, or whose corresponding conditional is a tautology See corresponding conditional; induction; tautology; validity, reasoning from the general to the particular (or from cause to effect), Something that may be subtracted from taxable income, Deduction infers information that is a logical consequence of the data, Reasoning from the general theory to predict the specific circumstance (general to specific), An item or expenditure subtracted from adjusted gross income to reduce the amount of income subject to tax, A flat dollar or percentage amount that is deducted from an employee's pay for taxes, credit union, parking, United Way, etc, A process of reasoning by which more specific consequences are inferred by rigorous argument from more general propositions, An amount that may be subtracted from income that is otherwise taxable, A system of logic, inference and conclusion drawn from examination of facts Conclusions drawn from the general down to the specific, Inference in which the conclusion about particulars follows necessarily from general theory In a science like Physical Geography, deductive reasoning would involve stating a theory first and then trying to find facts that reject this idea, Genus: Mental process of forming conclusions based on premises Differentia: Goes from the general to the specific Comment: Traditionally philosophers have treated Deduction as the only means to certainty This is misbegotten Link: Article, An amount that reduces your gross income Gross income minus subtractions and deductions equals net taxable income The most common tax deduction for you will be the standard deduction (See Form 40S, line 13 ), A presumably valid argument in which the argument proceeds from premises to conclusion in such a way that if the premisses are true, the conclusion absolutely must be true An inductive argument is one that does not meet this standard, its premisses giving at best some assurance, but not complete assurance, to its conclusion, To take one thing from another; remove from; make smaller by some amount, Amounts subtracted or withheld from your gross income (def 1) Some deductions, such as taxes , are required by law Others are elective For example, you might have the option of putting part of your earnings aside in a pension plan, individual retirement account (IRA), or other savings account You also might instruct your credit union to automatically regularly deduct a loan payment so that you don't have to remember to write a check each month (also called "payroll deductions"), subtract from a total, To lead forth or out, retain and refrain from disbursing; of payments; "My employer is withholding taxes", When you deduct an amount from a total, you subtract it from the total. The company deducted this payment from his compensation. to take away an amount or part from a total = subtract deduct sth from sth (deductus, past participle of deducere; DEDUCE), make a subtraction, To take away, separate, or remove, in numbering, estimating, or calculating; to subtract; often with from or out of, deductible, reason by deduction; establish by deduction, To reduce; to diminish, These are expenses the IRS allows you to subtract from your taxable income If you have taxable income of $30,000 and deductions of $3,000, then you would figure how much tax you owe on the difference -- $27,000 Even if you don't itemize, the IRS allows you to deduct alimony payments, capital losses, moving expenses, business losses, and deductible IRA and Keogh contributions If you have more deductible expenses -- medical costs, mortgage interest, state and local taxes, employee business expenses and charitable contributions -- you must itemize them to use the deductions, Expenses that the tax code allows you to deduct from your income, Amounts by which AGI is reduced; the greater of either the standard deduction or itemized deductions, Amounts or items subtracted as allowable expenses from gross income for income tax purposes or from gross estate for death tax purposes, Expenses that the tax code allows you to deduct from your income These expenses can change over time, but presently they include home mortgage interest, real estate taxes, charitable contributions, medical and miscellaneous business expenses On a business return, deductions comprise ordinary and necessary business expenses, plural of deduction, are subtractions from gross income for the purpose of determining a tax bill They are not the same as credits, which are subtracted from the actual tax paid, is money you spend to enable you to earn income - allowable deductions only - such as stationery, equipment, rent, electricity, telephone and tools The value of the deduction is subtracted from assessable income to calculate your taxable income, Money you spend to enable you to earn income - allowable deductions only - such as stationery, equipment, rent, electricity, telephone and tools The value of the deduction is subtracted from assessable income to calculate your taxable income, The amount withheld from the basic pay of an employee for the basic retirement benefit plan, Tax items which may be subtracted from gross income to arrive at taxable income in Federal income tax computations, Point values subtracted from a skater's marks due to error made by the skater or violations of the rules, All sales, leases and rentals of tangible personal property and services on which sales tax is not required to be collected, including sales for resale, sales to exempt organizations, sales shipped out-of-state, specifically exempt items, etc,

39 A conclusion reached by this process     ts
40 A process of reasoning that moves from the general to the specific, in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the premises presented, so that the conclusion cannot be false if the premises are true     ts
41 A conclusion; that which is deduced, concluded or figured out - "He arrived at the deduction that the butler didn't do it."     ts
42 That which is deducted; that which is subtracted or removed     ts
43 The ability or skill to deduce or figure out; the power of reason - "Through his powers of deduction, he realized that the plan would never work."     ts
44 A sum that can be removed from tax calculations; something that is written off - "You might want to donate the old junk and just take the deduction."     ts
45 An inference from a set of propositions, or premises, to another proposition, or conclusion, that must be true if the premises are true     ts
46 subtraction, reduction, discount; conclusion; method of logical reasoning in which one uses a general rule to determine individual elements  isim     ts
47 A formal logic in which specific conclusions are drawn from generalized premises     ts
48 For tax purposes, the portion of an estate that does not generate tax (such as a marital deduction)     ts
49 an amount or percentage deducted     ts
50 Any ordinary and necessary expense paid or incurred in a taxable year which is related to business or the production of income Such deductions are in addition to any other deduction Permitted by law and depend upon the accounting method used by the taxpayer Except where specifically authorized by Congress, expenses for personal or family purposes are usually not deductible A deduction has the effect of reducing the amount of taxable income and thereby reducing a taxpayer's tax liability If a person owns a house which serves as his or her personal residence, Congress permits mortgage interest, property taxes, and casualty losses as allowable deductions In addition to these deductions, owners of real estate held for other purposes may be entitled to deductions for maintenance expenses, minor repairs, insurance premiums, and depreciation     ts
51 An expense that is allowable as a reduction of gross taxable income by the IRS e g , charity donations     ts
52 A method of logical inference Given a cause, deduction infers all logical effects that might arise as a consequence See also: Inference, Abduction, Induction     ts
53 reasoning from the general to the particular (or from cause to effect) something that is inferred (deduced or entailed or implied); "his resignation had political implications"     ts
54 a. a process of reasoning that moves from the general to the specific, in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the premises presented, so that the conclusion cannot be false if the premises are true     ts
55 Act or process of deducing or inferring     ts
56 That which is deduced or drawn from premises by a process of reasoning; an inference; a conclusion     ts
57 Act of deducting or taking away; subtraction; as, the deduction of the subtrahend from the minuend     ts
58 That which is deducted; the part taken away; abatement; as, a deduction from the yearly rent     ts
59 Any amount taken from an employee's paycheck each pay period Deductions may include health or medical benefits, union dues, and so on     ts
60 the act of reducing the selling price of merchandise     ts
61 the act of subtracting (removing a part from the whole); "he complained about the subtraction of money from their paychecks"     ts
62 Reasoning in which the premises, if true, guarantee the truth of the conclusion Example, "All cats are mortal; Bill is a cat; therefore, Bill is mortal " Not all deduction is "from general to particular," as is sometimes said Nevertheless, the deduction of predictions of particular observable events from general hypotheses in order to test the hypotheses, is scientifically quite central Contrast: induction See also: logic, hypothetical deductive method     ts
63 Business expenses or losses that are subtracted from gross income in computing taxable income     ts
64 A method of reasoning by which one infers a conclusion from a set of sentences by employing the axioms and rules of inference for a given logical system See abduction, induction <Discussion> <References> Chris Eliasmith     ts
65 Reasoning from the general to the specific     ts
66 something that is inferred (deduced or entailed or implied); "his resignation had political implications"     ts
67 Deduction is the process of reaching a conclusion about something because of other things that you know to be true. a case that tested his powers of deduction     ts
68 A deduction is a conclusion that you have reached about something because of other things that you know to be true. It was a pretty astute deduction     ts
69 A deduction is an amount that has been subtracted from a total. your gross income     ts
70 Deduction is the act or process of subtracting an amount of money from a total amount. After the deduction of tax at 20 per cent, the interest rate will be 6.2 per cent. In logic, a type of inference or argument that purports to be valid, where a valid argument is one whose conclusion must be true if its premises are true (see validity). Deduction is thus distinguished from induction, where there is no such presumption. Valid deductive arguments may have false premises, as demonstrated by the example: "All men are mortal; Cleopatra is a man; therefore, Cleopatra is mortal." Invalid deductive arguments sometimes embody formal fallacies (i.e., errors of reasoning based on the structure of the propositions in the argument); an example is "affirming the consequent": "If A then B; B; therefore, A" (see fallacy; formal and informal)     ts
71 a reduction in the gross amount on which a tax is calculated; reduces taxes by the percentage fixed for the taxpayer's income bracket     ts
72 An inference in which (when valid) the conclusion contains no information that was not already present in the premises, or whose corresponding conditional is a tautology See corresponding conditional; induction; tautology; validity     ts
73 reasoning from the general to the particular (or from cause to effect)     ts
74 Something that may be subtracted from taxable income     ts
75 Deduction infers information that is a logical consequence of the data     ts
76 Reasoning from the general theory to predict the specific circumstance (general to specific)     ts
77 An item or expenditure subtracted from adjusted gross income to reduce the amount of income subject to tax     ts
78 A flat dollar or percentage amount that is deducted from an employee's pay for taxes, credit union, parking, United Way, etc     ts
79 A process of reasoning by which more specific consequences are inferred by rigorous argument from more general propositions     ts
80 An amount that may be subtracted from income that is otherwise taxable     ts
81 A system of logic, inference and conclusion drawn from examination of facts Conclusions drawn from the general down to the specific     ts
82 Inference in which the conclusion about particulars follows necessarily from general theory In a science like Physical Geography, deductive reasoning would involve stating a theory first and then trying to find facts that reject this idea     ts
83 Genus: Mental process of forming conclusions based on premises Differentia: Goes from the general to the specific Comment: Traditionally philosophers have treated Deduction as the only means to certainty This is misbegotten Link: Article     ts
84 An amount that reduces your gross income Gross income minus subtractions and deductions equals net taxable income The most common tax deduction for you will be the standard deduction (See Form 40S, line 13 )     ts
85 A presumably valid argument in which the argument proceeds from premises to conclusion in such a way that if the premisses are true, the conclusion absolutely must be true An inductive argument is one that does not meet this standard, its premisses giving at best some assurance, but not complete assurance, to its conclusion     ts
86deduct To take one thing from another; remove from; make smaller by some amount - "I will deduct the cost of the can of peas from the money I owe you."     ts
87deductions Amounts subtracted or withheld from your gross income (def 1) Some deductions, such as taxes , are required by law Others are elective For example, you might have the option of putting part of your earnings aside in a pension plan, individual retirement account (IRA), or other savings account You also might instruct your credit union to automatically regularly deduct a loan payment so that you don't have to remember to write a check each month (also called "payroll deductions")     ts
88deduct subtract from a total  fiil     ts
89deduct To lead forth or out     ts
90deduct retain and refrain from disbursing; of payments; "My employer is withholding taxes"     ts
91deduct When you deduct an amount from a total, you subtract it from the total. The company deducted this payment from his compensation. to take away an amount or part from a total = subtract deduct sth from sth (deductus, past participle of deducere; DEDUCE)     ts
92deduct make a subtraction     ts
93deduct To take away, separate, or remove, in numbering, estimating, or calculating; to subtract; often with from or out of     ts
94deduct deductible     ts
95deduct reason by deduction; establish by deduction     ts
96deduct To reduce; to diminish     ts
97deductions These are expenses the IRS allows you to subtract from your taxable income If you have taxable income of $30,000 and deductions of $3,000, then you would figure how much tax you owe on the difference -- $27,000 Even if you don't itemize, the IRS allows you to deduct alimony payments, capital losses, moving expenses, business losses, and deductible IRA and Keogh contributions If you have more deductible expenses -- medical costs, mortgage interest, state and local taxes, employee business expenses and charitable contributions -- you must itemize them to use the deductions     ts
98deductions Expenses that the tax code allows you to deduct from your income     ts
99deductions Amounts by which AGI is reduced; the greater of either the standard deduction or itemized deductions     ts
100deductions Amounts or items subtracted as allowable expenses from gross income for income tax purposes or from gross estate for death tax purposes     ts
101deductions Expenses that the tax code allows you to deduct from your income These expenses can change over time, but presently they include home mortgage interest, real estate taxes, charitable contributions, medical and miscellaneous business expenses On a business return, deductions comprise ordinary and necessary business expenses     ts
102deductions plural of deduction     ts
103deductions are subtractions from gross income for the purpose of determining a tax bill They are not the same as credits, which are subtracted from the actual tax paid     ts
104deductions is money you spend to enable you to earn income - allowable deductions only - such as stationery, equipment, rent, electricity, telephone and tools The value of the deduction is subtracted from assessable income to calculate your taxable income     ts
105deductions Money you spend to enable you to earn income - allowable deductions only - such as stationery, equipment, rent, electricity, telephone and tools The value of the deduction is subtracted from assessable income to calculate your taxable income     ts
106deductions The amount withheld from the basic pay of an employee for the basic retirement benefit plan     ts
107deductions Tax items which may be subtracted from gross income to arrive at taxable income in Federal income tax computations     ts
108deductions Point values subtracted from a skater's marks due to error made by the skater or violations of the rules     ts
109deductions All sales, leases and rentals of tangible personal property and services on which sales tax is not required to be collected, including sales for resale, sales to exempt organizations, sales shipped out-of-state, specifically exempt items, etc     ts
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Sözlük . Dictionary . Wörterbuch . λεξικό . Diccionario . 字典 . словарь . Dictionnaire . القاموس . Dizionario . מילון . Matokeo . واژه نامه . 辞書
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada deduction kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. deduction kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan deduction kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

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