- Sat Oct 07, 2017 2:26 pm
#40363
I am currently completing the Statement Negation Drill in Lesson 5 Homework.
Why is it that when we negate a sentence the language is not absolute? For example, the original statement from #6 is “The sun always rises.” My instinct in negating resulted in “The sun does not always rise” because the logical opposite of always is not always. However, the answer key lists the proper negation as “The sun might not always rise.” Where does the “might” come from?
Another example is #7: “No one except Henry knows the combination to the safe.” My instinct in negating resulted in “Some people beside Henry know the combination to the safe.” Whereas your answer key lists the correct negation as “Some people beside Henry may know the combination to the safe.”
Thank you in advance for your insight.
Why is it that when we negate a sentence the language is not absolute? For example, the original statement from #6 is “The sun always rises.” My instinct in negating resulted in “The sun does not always rise” because the logical opposite of always is not always. However, the answer key lists the proper negation as “The sun might not always rise.” Where does the “might” come from?
Another example is #7: “No one except Henry knows the combination to the safe.” My instinct in negating resulted in “Some people beside Henry know the combination to the safe.” Whereas your answer key lists the correct negation as “Some people beside Henry may know the combination to the safe.”
Thank you in advance for your insight.