It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!
Not necessarily. If the statement is "All rectangles are polygons", the converse is "All polygons are rectangles." This converse is not true.
A conditional statement may or may not be true.
True - but the statement is also true for all prime numbers, so is not a particularly useful statement.
Mathematical induction is just a way of proving a statement to be true for all positive integers: prove the statement to be true about 1; then assume it to be true for a generic integer x, and prove it to be true for x + 1; it therefore must be true for all positive integers.
They enhance survival.
This is true
It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!It is a true statement. If you buy them all, the probability of your winning is 1!
Not necessarily. If the statement is "All rectangles are polygons", the converse is "All polygons are rectangles." This converse is not true.
"All human beings are animals" is a true statement. All animals are not human beings.
true
That's a true statement. Another true statement is: All integers are rational numbers.
One true statement about the Constitutional Convention, was that not all of the delegates were willing to sign the Constitution.
One true statement about the Constitutional Convention, was that not all of the delegates were willing to sign the Constitution.
A conditional statement may or may not be true.
True - but the statement is also true for all prime numbers, so is not a particularly useful statement.
All of the above