Statement reads:

"Rattlesnakes molt exactly once a year."

How would you negate this? Is is better to use one statement that says "Rattlesnakes do not molt exactly once a year" or is it better to split it into two that each say "Rattlesnakes molt less than once a year" and "Rattlesnakes molt at least twice a year"? Or is the first statement logically equivalent to the combination of the second and third? Thanks

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4 comments

  • Sunday, Sep 20 2015

    @jimophtho788 glad it helped! The rattlesnake question is the very worst.

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Thank you guys. @coreyjanson479 your explanation was very helpful

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  • Thursday, Sep 17 2015

    Agreed that first statement is logically equivalent to first and third.

    @jimophtho788 I think most negations are pretty straightforward using a logical opposite along the lines of "it is not the case that" with the exception of situations where you need to negate a conditional statement (at least this is where I had the most trouble doing negations). In these conditional phrase cases you can use the "some...not..." format to find the logical opposite. For example to negate: "If one flies on a plane then one gets frequent flyer miles" we would say "some people that fly on planes do not get frequent flyer miles".

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  • Thursday, Sep 17 2015

    "Rattlesnakes do not molt exactly once a year", which could mean exactly what you said: more than once per year, or less than once per year.

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