@c.janson35 said:
but in general you don't have to worry too much about the truth and falsity of conditional statements for the test (in terms of truth tables).
... in the context of a conditional statement, "then" introduces a necessary ... "then" introduce a conclusion. A conditional statement using "then" could be ...
From my understanding, words like "maybe", "should", "could" aren't conditional indicator words so they aren't diagrammed. Words like "are," "is," "must" and "only" can be diagrammed.
... 't intended to be a conditional in and of itself. It ... is part of the greater conditional statement. I guess the easiest ... word that can be a conditional indicator will be an indicator ...
@StopLawying I’d go back to the lesson I linked, but essentially it’s this: any negation to a universally conditional statement (If X then Y) becomes an intersection statement (X some /Y).