I would say that false and untrue were the same and pertain to a statement of fact and the incorrectness of the statement is more stressed. Incorrect and wrong could pertain to anything including a statement of fact but are usually used with less emphasis.
"False," "untrue," "incorrect," and "wrong" all generally mean not true or accurate. However, "false" and "untrue" are often used interchangeably, while "incorrect" and "wrong" typically imply a deviation from what is deemed as accurate or correct.
False because the difference between it is 180
false can not be proven true wrong is not right
True means that it is correct. False means it is not true.
"What is the difference between inequalities and equations" is a question, not a statement. A question cannot be true or false. It can be pointless, or badly phrased or misguided but that is a different matter.
false
One is true and one is false
True means correct, factual. False is the opposite - it means not true or not correct.
There is no difference. The statements are equally false.
The correct term is false ceiling. Fall ceiling isn't correct.
I suggest that the answer is that the statement is false.
Yes.
true