No. For example, consider
If you dive into a pool then you will get wet.
If you get wet then you will dive into the pool.
In the second statement, apart from the chronology getting reversed, you could get wet by standing in the rain, or having a shower.
B. False. Reversing the clauses of an if-then statement changes its meaning, and the new statement is not necessarily true. For example, in the statement "If it rains, then the ground is wet," reversing it to "If the ground is wet, then it rains" is not always true, as the ground could be wet for other reasons.
Ordinarily yes. This is called "contraposition" in formal logic :For any statement where A implies B, then not B always implies not A. Proving or disproving either one of these statements automatically proves or disproves the other.If A then B means that B is a subset of A, and anything not part of B cannot be part of A.However, some if-then or cause-effect statements, once made negative or reversed, represent an entirely different fact that may or may not be true.For example:"If I get the high score, then I will receive the award."would be true in contraposition if the award is based only on the score."If I do not receive the award, then I did not get the high score."However, if the award was denied on some other basis, the contraposition is not valid.The valid statement would be "If I get the high score, then I will definitely get the award."
False. If you take a true if-then statement and insert "not" in each clause, the new statement may not necessarily be true. The structure of the logic changes, and a true statement can become false depending on the relationships between the clauses. For example, the original statement "If A, then B" becomes "If not A, then not B," which is not logically equivalent.
it is ternary form
July 18th, would be VII/XVIII and reversed for 18th of July.
true
The answer is false
True
True. In that case, each of the statements is said to be the contrapositive of the other.
If the conditional (if, then) is true, then the contrapositive (reversed; if not, then not) will be also true. And vice versa, if the conditional is false, its contrapositive will be also false. for example,If a graph passes the vertical line test, then it is a graph of a function. (True)If a graph is not a graph of a function, then it will not pass the vertical line test. (True)Yes, but only if the original if-then was true.
A reversible statement is one where the truth of the statement would still hold if the subject and predicate were reversed. For example, "All squares are rectangles" is reversible because it is also true that "All rectangles are squares."
Ordinarily yes. This is called "contraposition" in formal logic :For any statement where A implies B, then not B always implies not A. Proving or disproving either one of these statements automatically proves or disproves the other.If A then B means that B is a subset of A, and anything not part of B cannot be part of A.However, some if-then or cause-effect statements, once made negative or reversed, represent an entirely different fact that may or may not be true.For example:"If I get the high score, then I will receive the award."would be true in contraposition if the award is based only on the score."If I do not receive the award, then I did not get the high score."However, if the award was denied on some other basis, the contraposition is not valid.The valid statement would be "If I get the high score, then I will definitely get the award."
Ordinarily yes. This is called "contraposition" in formal logic :For any statement where A implies B, then not B always implies not A. Proving or disproving either one of these statements automatically proves or disproves the other.If A then B means that B is a subset of A, and anything not part of B cannot be part of A.However, some if-then or cause-effect statements, once made negative or reversed, represent an entirely different fact that may or may not be true.For example:"If I get the high score, then I will receive the award."would be true in contraposition if the award is based only on the score."If I do not receive the award, then I did not get the high score."However, if the award was denied on some other basis, the contraposition is not valid.The valid statement would be "If I get the high score, then I will definitely get the award."
In the above statement the correct number of independent clauses is three words.
There are two clauses in that sentence:If you could come in on Sundaythat would be great
A wollyfloggle is a word that, when reversed, forms a new word. Examples would be "evil" reversed to "live" or "pal" reversed to give "lap".
the population of the moth would have change if its reversed by having