dnngn
True. When people invest in mutual funds they are making loans to banks and their investments are insured by the FDIC.
Mutual funds accounts are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The FDIC only insures bank accounts (i.e., checking accounts and savings accounts, not mutual funds accounts). Anyone who invests in mutual funds is taking a certain amount of risk. Those funds can (and usually do) increase in value, but they can also decrease in value. If they decrease in value, that money is not going to be repaid by insurance. It is simply lost.
true
Promissory estoppel is when a person makes a false statement to another and the listener relies on what was told to him/her in good faith and to his/her disadvantage.
It means to proof with a statement that is assumed true and if the assumption leads to an impossibility, then the statement is false and you have to create a new one. You use variables, its not necessary to use numbers and make a real equation. -ccs
True. When people invest in mutual funds they are making loans to banks and their investments are insured by the FDIC.
If the statement is false, then "This statement is false", is a lie, making it "This statement is true." The statement is now true. But if the statement is true, then "This statement is false" is true, making the statement false. But if the statement is false, then "This statement is false", is a lie, making it "This statement is true." The statement is now true. But if the statement is true, then... It's one of the biggest paradoxes ever, just like saying, "I'm lying right now."
A false statement is "Wetlands are deserts."
Yes, a statement can be true or false but without knowing what the statement is no-one can possibly say whether it is true or it is false.
A counterexample is a specific case in which a statement is false.
Let us consider "This statement is false." This quotation could also be read as "This, which is a statement, is false," which could by extent be read as "This is a statement and it is false." Let's call this quotation P. The statement that P is a statement will be called Q. If S, then R and S equals R; therefore, if Q, then P equals not-P (since it equals Q and not-P). Since P cannot equal not-P, we know that Q is false. Since Q is false, P is not a statement. Since P says that it is a statement, which is false, P itself is false. Note that being false does not make P a statement; all things that are statements are true or false, but it is not necessarily true that all things that are true or false are statements. In summary: "this statement is false" is false because it says it's a statement but it isn't.
1-true 2-false
A counter example is a statement that shows conjecture is false.
False. A declaration is a public statement.
false
false
=IF(statement,true,false)