Is the term "except" indicative of a biconditional or a group 3 conditional? I believe 7Sage says biconditional, but I have heard some say it is the same as 'unless' (group 3).
Can anyone please tell me if there are key words that indicate the rule is a biconditional rule? for some reason I thought it was only "if and only if"
Thanks in advance
so hopefully this is a temporary loss of clarity, but I can't quite articulate the difference. In grouping games it seems that both A-->/B and A/B can both be represented visually on a gameboard stacked in a box with a slash no? As in, if A is in a ...
Hi guys had a question regarding or. To determine whether or not it is the "inclusive" or "and" interpretation we use context. For exclusive interpretation we are to use a a biconditional indicator to show one or the other?
Correct me if I am wrong.
... 't it be interpreted as biconditional? S /Y as in S ... the in-out games, a biconditional in this a grouping game ... interpret the rule as a biconditional?
Hi guys, I'm going through the biconditional part of the curriculum. Im wondering, for the Or, but not both biconditional, why don't we just write it out like this A -> /B and B->/A, that way you can link it up as well if a chain comes up?
... the game there are 2 biconditional rules and 2 conditional rules ... />
JY does not combine the biconditional rules with the conditional rules ... />
Should we never combine biconditional rules with other rules?