apodosis

Etymology
, itself borrowed from.

Noun

 * 1)  The consequential clause in a conditional sentence.
 * In "I will be coming if this weather holds up", "I will be coming" is the apodosis and "this weather holds up" is the protasis.
 * 1) * 1943  Dornford Yates     An Eye for a Tooth
 * "If, after that, there is anything more to be done. . ." "Yes?""You’d well better do it," said Forecast. The meaning with which he invested this blunt apodosis  was unmistakable. Even I, an eavesdropper, found it most sinister: and I was not surprised when, after a little silence, the other turned on his heel and led the way to the road.
 * 1) * 1997 Angeliki Athanasiadou, René Dirven (eds) On Conditionals Again p. 309 by Hansjakob Seiler
 * There is furthermore the claim that conditionals necessarily involve a causal relation from protasis to apodosis. This may hold for the "conjunctive" types signalling a natural consequence from protasis to apodosis, but becomes increasingly unlikely as we approach disjunctive structures of the type. "May I perish most miserably, if I do not love Xanthia." does not mean "May I perish most miserably, because I do not love Xanthia."
 * There is furthermore the claim that conditionals necessarily involve a causal relation from protasis to apodosis. This may hold for the "conjunctive" types signalling a natural consequence from protasis to apodosis, but becomes increasingly unlikely as we approach disjunctive structures of the type. "May I perish most miserably, if I do not love Xanthia." does not mean "May I perish most miserably, because I do not love Xanthia."

Translations

 * Arabic: جَوَابُ الشَّرْط
 * Finnish: ehtovirkkeen päätöslause
 * French:
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: ἀπόδοσις
 * Ottoman Turkish: جزا
 * Polish: następnik
 * Portuguese: apódose