1. The document appears to be a quiz asking students to identify the parts of propositions by underlining specific terms with different colored inks. It provides 20 sample propositions to analyze.
2. The second part of the quiz asks students to answer 3 essay questions in writing about the definitions of a judgment, what constitutes a proposition, and how a proposition differs from a sentence.
3. The quiz is assessing students' understanding of logical terms like quantifiers, subjects, predicates, and copulas, as well as their ability to distinguish between propositions, sentences, and judgments.
1. The document appears to be a quiz asking students to identify the parts of propositions by underlining specific terms with different colored inks. It provides 20 sample propositions to analyze.
2. The second part of the quiz asks students to answer 3 essay questions in writing about the definitions of a judgment, what constitutes a proposition, and how a proposition differs from a sentence.
3. The quiz is assessing students' understanding of logical terms like quantifiers, subjects, predicates, and copulas, as well as their ability to distinguish between propositions, sentences, and judgments.
1. The document appears to be a quiz asking students to identify the parts of propositions by underlining specific terms with different colored inks. It provides 20 sample propositions to analyze.
2. The second part of the quiz asks students to answer 3 essay questions in writing about the definitions of a judgment, what constitutes a proposition, and how a proposition differs from a sentence.
3. The quiz is assessing students' understanding of logical terms like quantifiers, subjects, predicates, and copulas, as well as their ability to distinguish between propositions, sentences, and judgments.
1. The document appears to be a quiz asking students to identify the parts of propositions by underlining specific terms with different colored inks. It provides 20 sample propositions to analyze.
2. The second part of the quiz asks students to answer 3 essay questions in writing about the definitions of a judgment, what constitutes a proposition, and how a proposition differs from a sentence.
3. The quiz is assessing students' understanding of logical terms like quantifiers, subjects, predicates, and copulas, as well as their ability to distinguish between propositions, sentences, and judgments.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 1
Quiz No.
2 Date: March 9, 2020
Name: _______________________________________ Course & Block: ____________________ Score: _____ A. Identify the parts of a proposition. Underline the quantifier with a green ink, the subject term with a black ink, the predicate term with a blue ink, and the copula with a purple ink. 1. All tigers are wild animals. 2. Most of the elderly members of the Elite club are old-fashioned. 3. No canaries are melancholy creatures. 4. Some holidays spent in the mountains are stimulating and refreshing vacations. 5. Some of my suitors are terrible bores. 6. No coins are square objects. 7. Many professors are strict when it comes to attendance of their students. 8. All hogs are porcine creatures. 9. All women are beautiful people. B. Essay. Answer the following questions. Write your answers at the back. You may use a separate sheet of 10. No catfish are feline creatures. paper if necessary. 11. No people are ugly. 1. What is a judgment? 12. Some right triangles are not Pythagorean figures. 2. What constitutes a proposition? 13. Every politician is a trustworthy person. 3. What makes a proposition different from a sentence? 14. Some spiders are web spinners. 15. No elderly ladies are talkative people. 16. All rabbits are furry animals. 17. Some concerts are enjoyable affairs. 18. No teachers are students. 19. Some teachers are not competent teachers. 20. All wallabies are marsupials.
Quiz No. 2 Date: March 9, 2020
Name: ________________________________________ Course & Block: ___________________ Score: _____ A. Identify the parts of a proposition. Underline the quantifier with a green ink, the subject term with a black ink, the predicate term with a blue ink, and the copula with a purple ink. 1. All tigers are wild animals. 2. Most of the elderly members of the Elite club are old-fashioned. 3. No canaries are melancholy creatures. 4. Some holidays spent in the mountains are stimulating and refreshing vacations. 5. Some of my suitors are terrible bores. 6. No coins are square objects. 7. Many professors are strict when it comes to attendance of their students. 8. All hogs are porcine creatures. 9. All women are beautiful people. B. Essay. Answer the following questions. Write your 10. No catfish are feline creatures. answers at the back. You may use a separate sheet of 11. No people are ugly. paper if necessary. 1. What is a judgment? 12. Some right triangles are not Pythagorean figures. 2. What constitutes a proposition? 13. Every politician is a trustworthy person. 3. What makes a proposition different from a 14. Some spiders are web spinners. sentence? 15. No elderly ladies are talkative people. 16. All rabbits are furry animals. 17. Some concerts are enjoyable affairs. 18. No teachers are students. 19. Some teachers are not competent teachers. 20. All wallabies are marsupials.