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Well you're answer is wrong.Suit yourself.
I didn't call this a challenge for nothing.
A true story:Well you're answer is wrong.
Root beer does have flavor. So either you did taste it or something is wrong with your sense of taste....or you didnt drink it.
Your story highlights an error in cross cultural communication. Nothing more.A true story:
A man from France new to the United States took out for lunch a group of scientists he was assigned to manage.
As the waitress was taking the "drinks order" two answered "root beer please".
I noticed an odd expression on the French managers face and when the waitress asked for what drink he wanted he said "what those ordered". The waitress said root beer and he said yes.
When the many drinks came out and set before others, I noticed another odd expression from the new French manager.
When the waitress came back he jestered to her with his hand to come here, and when she was near him he said "I asked for a beer". Everybody laughed at the situation.
This story helps explain in real life the paradox of how both statements in the OP are true.
Can you make sense of this?
Root beer.You've only drunk American beer?
Root beer.
Then you do know what beer tastes like, and your challenge is based on a falsehood.
I've drank beer before ... many times
Yet I don't know what beer tastes like.
Can you make sense of this?
Root beer.
That is correct. I do know what beer tastes like.Then you do know what beer tastes like, and your challenge is based on a falsehood.
That is correct. I do know what beer tastes like.
And I do not know what beer tastes like.
Make sense of the "do not" part.
You do and do not.That is correct. I do know what beer tastes like.
And I do not know what beer tastes like.
Make sense of the "do not" part.
That is correct. I do know what beer tastes like.
And I do not know what beer tastes like.
Make sense of the "do not" part.
BINGO!You change the definition of "beer" from the first to the second sentence, yet give no clue that you have done so, in order to make your claims intentionally ambiguous.
BINGO!
Only I don't change the "definition of beer," I change the "kind of beer:" from root beer to alcohol.
That is correct.Sop you are intentionally confusing ...
That is correct.
I once saw a book in a bookstore that was full of those kinds of literary illusions.
It was fascinating to flip through.
Here's another one:
Two train engines are on the same track, facing each other and going 100 m.p.h.
Despite the fact that they are just a mile apart, and in a dense fog and can't see each other, they never collide.
Why?
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