Step-by-step explanation:
Given Statement: Gerald bought his first car after saving up $5,000.
The conditional conjunction after identifies the dependent clause, the one corresponding to the "if" statement in a conditional.
Conditional Statement:
If Gerald saved $5000, then he bought his first car.
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Converse Statement:
If Gerald bought his first car, then he saved $5000.
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Inverse Statement:
If Gerald did not save $5000, then he did not buy his first car.
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Contrapositive Statement: (converse of the inverse)
If Gerald did not buy his first car, then he did not save $5000.
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Biconditional Statement:
If and only if Gerald saved $5000, then he bought his first car.