not always but most of the time yes.
It depends on how cunningly the question is worded.
Often teachers love to deceive or trap students by using partial truth statements on quizzes and test.
It is the start of a question. A statement would then follow as part of the question. It is asking you to read that statement and carry out the instructions in the first part of the question. Without the statement it is not possible to answer the question.
False. The question consists of two parts: - a number is divisible by 6 if it is divisible by 3? False. It must also be divisible by 2. - a number is divisible by 6 only if it is divisible by 3? This is true but the false part makes the whole statement false.
Yeah its not the part of the questions but the remainig part of the question depends on it
Nothing five is a prime factor and so nothing whether positive or negative will multiply to negative five, this question is impossible. The two part doesn't matter because the five part makes the whole statement false.
We don't know what "this" is so we are unable to answer the question.
true The question is, in part, a true statement
That is a false statement. The President is part of the executive branch.
It's not clear what you wish to know, as this is a statement and not a question, but if you want to learn about this then search for the term "perjury".
The statement is monumentally false.
It is the start of a question. A statement would then follow as part of the question. It is asking you to read that statement and carry out the instructions in the first part of the question. Without the statement it is not possible to answer the question.
Look at the statement If 9 is an odd number, then 9 is divisible by 2. The first part is true and second part is false so logically the statement is false. The contrapositive is: If 9 is not divisible by 2, then 9 is not an odd number. The first part is true, the second part is false so the statement is true. Now the converse of the contrapositive If 9 is not an odd number, then 9 is not divisible by two. The first part is false and the second part is true so it is false. The original statement is if p then q,the contrapositive is if not q then not p and the converse of that is if not p then not q
false
false
False. The question consists of two parts: - a number is divisible by 6 if it is divisible by 3? False. It must also be divisible by 2. - a number is divisible by 6 only if it is divisible by 3? This is true but the false part makes the whole statement false.
False
6
This is part of a statement, not a question!