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37 votes
37 votes

The CORRECT formula for the sentence, "not all Rainy days are Cold" is

  1. $\forall d (\text{Rainy}(d) \wedge \text{~Cold}(d))$
  2. $\forall d ( \text{~Rainy}(d) \to \text{Cold}(d))$
  3. $\exists d(\text{~Rainy}(d) \to \text{Cold}(d))$
  4. $\exists d(\text{Rainy}(d) \wedge \text{~Cold}(d))$
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11 Answers

Best answer
46 votes
46 votes

Not all rainy days are cold.

In other words it says $``\text{Some rainy days are not cold"}$

Given statement is
$\neg \forall d[R(d)\to C(d)]$
$\equiv \neg \forall d[\neg R(d) \vee C(d)]$
$\equiv \exists d[R(d)\wedge \neg C(d)]$
Hence option (D) is correct.

27 votes
27 votes
  1. No rainy days are cold
  2. All non-rainy days are cold
  3. Some non-rainy days are cold.
  4. Some rainy days are not cold.


Option $D$.

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14 votes
14 votes

Try this way

NOT (all rainy days are cold)

~($\forall$d Rainy(d)->Cold(d))

~($\forall$ ~Rainy(d) $\vee$cold(d))

$\exists$d( Rainy (d) $\wedge$~Cold(d))

OPTION D

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6 votes
6 votes

not all rainy days are cold : meaning "there are some rainy days which are cold" = "some days are rainy and not cold".

∃d{R(d) \scriptstyle \wedge ¬C(d)}

ans = option D

Answer:

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