Corollary

Etymology
From, from corollarium: < corolla:, diminutive of corona:.

Noun

 * 1) Something given beyond what is actually due; something  added or superfluous.
 * 2) Something which occurs a fortiori, as a result of another effort without significant additional effort.
 * Finally getting that cracked window fixed was a nice corollary of redoing the whole storefont.
 * 1)  A proposition which follows easily from the proof of another proposition.
 * We have proven that this set is finite and well ordered; as a corollary, we now know that there is an order-preserving map from it to the natural numbers.

Adjectives
necessary; reasonable; definite; consequent; maintained; sustained; abrupt; inevitable; eventual; invariable.

Thesaurus
accession, accessory, accompaniment, addenda, addendum, additament, addition, additive, additory, additum, adjunct, adjuvant, aftereffect, annex, annexation, appanage, appendage, appendant, appurtenance, appurtenant, attachment, attendant, augment, augmentation, by-product, coda, complement, conclusion, concomitant, consequence, consequent, continuation, deduction, derivation, derivative, development, distillate, effect, end product, event, eventuality, eventuation, extension, extrapolation, fixture, fruit, harvest, illation, increase, increment, induction, inference, issue, legacy, logical outcome, offshoot, offspring, outcome, outgrowth, pendant, precipitate, product, reinforcement, result, resultant, sequel, sequela, sequence, sequent, side effect, side issue, supplement, tailpiece, undergirding, upshot

Translations

 * Bulgarian: извод, следствие
 * Czech:
 * Danish: korollar
 * Dutch:
 * French:, corolaire
 * German:
 * Hebrew: מסקנה
 * Italian:


 * Japanese: 系
 * Macedonian: королар
 * Persian: فرع
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: ,