A sentence that provides information is a statement, whether it is true, false or even if its veracity is uncertain, or doubted, or simply not known.
A sentence that asks for information is a question. A question is not a statement.
Yes, all sentences that can be classified as either true or false are considered statements. Statements are assertions that can be evaluated as either being factually accurate (true) or incorrect (false).
False
A sentence is a grammatical unit that expresses a complete thought, while a statement is a type of sentence that conveys a declaration, assertion, or fact. Not all sentences are statements, as questions and commands are also types of sentences.
A conjunction statement is a compound statement formed by combining two or more simpler statements using the word "and". It is true only if all the individual statements that make it up are true. For example, the conjunction statement "It is sunny and warm" would be true only if both the statements "It is sunny" and "It is warm" are true.
No because sentences can also end with ! or ? With respect to the above answer, all sentences end with a period, which is placed after the question mark or the exclamation mark. It is there to indicate that the statement is complete and the beginning of the next sentence therefore commences with a capital letter
no
Not true. It's false. Definitely not true at all. It's definitely false. It's not a true statement. False statement.
true
false
"All human beings are animals" is a true statement. All animals are not human beings.
False
false
This is a true statement.
The statement is false.
All four-sided polygons are squares. (False) Squares are all four-sided polygons. (True)
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.
true
This statement is False!