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Usenet Posted 21 years ago
English in UK

Question: difference between "therefore", "hence", and "thus"

Hello,
I'm a native German speaker, but like to express myself in English.

Since a while I've been wondering what the difference between "therefore", "hence", and "thus" is. Can anybody explain it to be, and point out some examples how to use them appropriately?

Cheers,
Wolfram
  

Top answer

[nq:1]Hello, I'm a native German speaker, but like to express myself in English. Since a while I've been wondering what the difference between "therefore", "hence", and "thus" is. [/nq] They are all roughly synonymous with "so", which would be the most colloquial of the terms.

  • [nq:1]Hello, I'm a native German speaker, but like to express myself in English.
  • Since a while I've been wondering what the difference between "therefore", "hence", and "thus" is.
  • [/nq] They are all roughly synonymous with "so", which would be the most colloquial of the terms.
  • "Therefore" is also in common use but "hence" sounds more appropriate to a scientific argument and "thus" sounds rather old-fashioned.
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7 Answers
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[nq:1]Hello, I'm a native German speaker, but like to express myself in English. Since a while I've been wondering what the difference between "therefore", "hence", and "thus" is. Can anybody explain it to be, and point out some examples how to use them appropriately?[/nq]
They are all roughly synonymous with "so", which would be the most colloquial of the terms. "Therefore" is also in common
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[nq:2]Hello, I'm a native German speaker, but like to express ... and point out some examples how to use them appropriately?[/nq]
[nq:1]They are all roughly synonymous with "so", which would be the most colloquial of the terms. "Therefore" is also in common use but "hence" sounds more appropriate to a scientific argument and "thus" sounds rather old-fashioned.[/nq]
You think so (for 'thus'
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[nq:2]Since a while I've been wondering what the difference between ... and point out some examples how to use them appropriately?[/nq]
[nq:1]They are all roughly synonymous with "so", which would be the most colloquial of the terms. "Therefore" is also in common use but "hence" sounds more appropriate to a scientific argument and "thus" sounds rather old-fashioned.[/nq]
Thanks for the exp
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[nq:1]I'd assume, that "thus" is related to reasoning, while neither "hence" nor "therefore" is.[/nq]
"I think, therefore I am" - it is related to reasoning. I think the words are completely synonymous, and an example of the common English practice of varying the word used purely to break the monotony (which in fact we were taught in school back in the sixties).

Paul Burke
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[nq:2]They are all roughly synonymous with "so", which would be ... appropriate to a scientific argument and "thus" sounds rather old-fashioned.[/nq]
[nq:1]Thanks for the explanation.
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[nq:1]I'd assume, that "thus" is related to reasoning, while neither "hence" nor "therefore" is.[/nq]
"Therefore" is a standard term used in mathematical reasoning. It has its own symbol: 3 dots in a regular triangle pointing upwards.

An example can be seen nearly halfway down this webpage:
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[nq:2]I'd assume, that "thus" is related to reasoning, while neither "hence" nor "therefore" is.[/nq]
[nq:1]"Therefore" is a standard term used in mathematical reasoning. It has its own symbol: 3 dots in a regular triangle pointing upwards. An example can be seen nearly halfway down this webpage:

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