Restart
7 of 10

Which quantifier is used to express uniqueness in first order logic?

  • ∃!
  • ∀∃
  • ∃∀
That's Correct!
It's Wrong!

The quantifier used to express uniqueness in first-order logic is: ∃!

The symbol ∃! is read as "there exists a unique" and is used to assert that there is exactly one element satisfying a given property. It combines the existential quantifier (∃) with the uniqueness assertion (!). For example, ∃!x P(x) would be read as "There exists a unique x such that P(x) is true."

Your New Favorite Thing

the-ultimate-lord-voldemort-quiz

The Ultimate Lord Voldemort Quiz

the-newts-quiz

The N.E.W.T.s quiz

the-nymphadora-tonks-quiz

The Nymphadora Tonks quiz

newt-scamander-challenge-quiz

The Newt Scamander challenge quiz

what-happens-next-quiz-fred-and-george-edition

What happened next: the Fred and George edition

do-i-have-the-flu-or-a-cold-quiz

Quiz: Do I Have the Flu or a Cold, or Maybe COVID-19?

Key Data

Questions
10
Category
Math
Correct
0
Incorrect
0

Quizzes For Fun

taylor-swift

Taylor Swift

love

Love

personality

Personality

trivia

Trivia

letter-trivia

Letter Trivia

animal

Pets & Animals

tv-movie

TV & Movie

harry-potter

Harry Potter

celebrity

Celebrity

games

Games

math

Math

zodiac

Zodiac

fun

Fun

education

Education

cartoon

Cartoon

sports

Sports

bible

Bible

science

Science

nutrition

Nutrition

health

Health

festival

Festival