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1 |  |  A categorical claim of the form "All S are P" is called a(n) -claim. |
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2 |  |  A(n) claim is one that includes one class within the other; an A- or I-claim. |
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3 |  |  An assertion about groups of things is a claim. |
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4 |  |  The study of relations among categories or groups of things is logic. |
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5 |  |  A syllogism in which both premises and the conclusion are categorical claims, and in which three terms appear, is a syllogism. |
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6 |  |  A term naming everything not in the class named by another term is a term. |
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7 |  |  claims are two corresponding claims that fall into one of these pairs: Either one is an A-claim and the other an O-claim, or one is an E-claim and the other an I-claim. |
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8 |  |  A(n) is a claim formed by switching the subject and predicate terms of a categorical claim, and replacing both by their complementary terms. |
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9 |  |  claims are two corresponding claims, of which one is an A-claim and the other an E-claim. |
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10 |  |  A(n) claim is one formed by switching subject and predicate terms of a categorical claim. |
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11 |  |  Two or more standard-form categorical claims that possess the same subject term and the same predicate term are called claims. |
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12 |  |  In a categorical claim, a term is a term of which the claim asserts something true of all members of the class named. |
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13 |  |  A(n) -claim is a categorical claim of the form "No S are P." |
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14 |  |  Two claims that are both true or both false under the same circumstances are claims. |
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15 |  |  A categorical claim of the form "Some S are P" is called a(n) -claim. |
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16 |  |  In a categorical syllogism, the predicate term of the conclusion is the term and is symbolized by P. |
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17 |  |  In a categorical syllogism, the term appearing in both premises but not in the conclusion is the term and is symbolized by M. |
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18 |  |  In a categorical syllogism, the subject term of the conclusion is the term and is symbolized by S. |
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19 |  |  A(n) claim is one that excludes one class from the other; an E- or O-claim. |
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20 |  |  A claim formed by changing a categorical claim from affirmative to negative (or vice versa), and replacing the predicate term with its complementary term is . |
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21 |  |  A categorical claim of the form "Some S are not P" is a -claim. |
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22 |  |  The second term in a standard-form claim is called the term. |
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23 |  |  A diagram that shows the logical relations among all corresponding categorical claims is called the of . |
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24 |  |  A(n) categorical claim is one written so as to belong clearly to one of the four groups, A-, E-, I-, and O-claims. |
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25 |  |  Two corresponding claims, of which one is an I-claim and the other an O-claim, are claims. |
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26 |  |  The first term in a standard-form claim is the term. |
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27 |  |  A deductive argument with two premises is a . |
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