Asked by jose
Never by something you do not fully understand
True
False
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
False.
The statement (likely meant as "Never buy something you do not fully understand") is good common-sense advice for complex, risky, or technical purchases (investments, insurance, contracts, medical treatments). But taken literally it's impractical — you can't fully understand every product or service you purchase. A better rule: make sure you understand the key risks, costs, and benefits or get competent advice before buying anything important or high‑risk. Tips: ask questions, read key terms, get a second opinion, and start small or test before committing.
The statement (likely meant as "Never buy something you do not fully understand") is good common-sense advice for complex, risky, or technical purchases (investments, insurance, contracts, medical treatments). But taken literally it's impractical — you can't fully understand every product or service you purchase. A better rule: make sure you understand the key risks, costs, and benefits or get competent advice before buying anything important or high‑risk. Tips: ask questions, read key terms, get a second opinion, and start small or test before committing.
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