Coworker comes to me for a project at work.
Him: We gotta work on a project.
Me: Not now, sorry...busy. *He leaves seeing me pressing keys on keyboard*
Me: *F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5 F5*
The arrow represents the rule ... two conditions. For me, "the arrow" is more concrete than "the ... --> C rule, so that arrow disappears, leaving us with A ...
... parenthesis by changing the first arrow to an "and" and keeping ... I did. Use the "or" arrow rule (which is negating the ... term that you remove the arrow for along each step in ... by step application of the arrow to or translation rule.
... one "best student", then the arrow goes both ways. If you ... as "dogs --> cute". The arrow only goes one way, since ... to be cute. However, the arrow doesn't go the other ...
... when combining them together, the arrow splits for Q and N ... ; nP. In this case, the arrow doesn't split because it ... "and" statement in the sufficient, arrow doesn't split.