Question
What is a converse of a theorem that is an if-then statement?
the converse is the same as the original theorem
the two parts are negated by using the word not
the if part and then part switch places
the converse of a theorem has no relationship to the original theorem
the converse is the same as the original theorem
the two parts are negated by using the word not
the if part and then part switch places
the converse of a theorem has no relationship to the original theorem
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct answer is: **the if part and then part switch places**.
In an if-then statement of the form "If P, then Q," the converse would be "If Q, then P."
In an if-then statement of the form "If P, then Q," the converse would be "If Q, then P."
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