- Sat Feb 25, 2012 11:39 pm
#3696
Hi,
I understood the flaw in this question to be a mistaken negation, if we deny the sufficient condition (play being successful) we can't say for sure what the outcome will be.
I know why (E) is correct, but what is (A) actually saying? What is the distinction between neither nor and not both? Doesn't neither nor mean not both? (Ex: He will have neither cake nor ice cream = not both). I would appreciate any help on this.
Thank you!
I understood the flaw in this question to be a mistaken negation, if we deny the sufficient condition (play being successful) we can't say for sure what the outcome will be.
I know why (E) is correct, but what is (A) actually saying? What is the distinction between neither nor and not both? Doesn't neither nor mean not both? (Ex: He will have neither cake nor ice cream = not both). I would appreciate any help on this.
Thank you!