False. Many poems' narrators are not the speaker. Many poets write every poem of theirs from the perspective of another speaker. Unless it is stated that the poem is definitely biographical, one should never assume that the speaker is the poem's author.
False, the Bekes who are Broons are not necessarily among the Bekes who are Toogs.
Heretic
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.
He or she is actually called the narrator. The narrator differs from the author in that the author wrote the poem but the narrator lives inside the poem and is giving a firsthand account of the story.
false
False
They are not inevitably false, but they are necessarily incomplete.
False.
False
its false it says you can not read from a book
false !
False
Cleopatra herself sent the false report about her death.
Fact
false
False but they are both 4 sided quadrilaterals
False. All Woolies might be tollies but that doesn't mean that all tollies are necessarily woolies. Nor are all wamples necessarily tollies. So the answer is definitely false.