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If some clouds are black and it's humid, then it will rain.
I have it notated as follows:
C(-s-)B + H -> R
My question is - can you even take a contrapositive of this statement?
And if so, is it the following:
/R -> /H or C->/B
In other words:
If it is not raining, then it means either it is not humid or all clouds are not black...
Am i correct in thinking this?
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1 comments
Hi there, "Some" statements can be read both ways. You don't need a contrapositive for the Some statement below, specifically.
Refer to the lesson link I posted below.
So in this case, C (Some) B and H -> R
The contrapositive should be: R-> H or C Some B
If it is not raining, then it means either it is not humid or some clouds are not black.
This is how far as my understanding goes - If someone else would like to correct me, they're most welcome.
Link: https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/some-statements-translation/