Ambiguous or not?

Caporegime
Joined
17 Feb 2006
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Location
Cornwall
Simple question time...

"...you and your immediate family (max 2 adults and 3 children)..."

"You" are an adult. So how many adults and children in total are being referred to?

The correct answer btw is 2 adults (including yourself) and 3 children.

I'm wondering if anyone here could possibly interpret that any other way? And if so, why/how?
 
Isn't that the max, so there could be 1 adult and possibly less children, some context is required.
Context isn't 100% necessary, I don't think.

Under no circumstances would you assume that statement could be referring to a total party size of up to 3 adults and up to 3 children, yes?

That's the crux of the question.
 
Context isn't 100% necessary, I don't think.

Under no circumstances would you assume that statement could be referring to a total party size of up to 3 adults and up to 3 children, yes?

That's the crux of the question.

Have you read the thread about commuting in motors? I wouldn't be surprised if there were people who would argue it meant 12 adults and 47 children :p
 
Have you read the thread about commuting in motors? I wouldn't be surprised if there were people who would argue it meant 12 adults and 47 children :p
I'm not often in that neck of the woods, as I don't have enough Bitcoin to drive a Lambo. Also I know literally nothing about cars or driving.

But thanks for the reply :p
 
i would add the words "Up to" so "... You and your immediate family (up to 2 adults and 3 children in total)

fixed
You've also added "in total" however, which was not in the original text.

"...you and your immediate family (up to 2 adults and 3 children)..."

But that still means up to 2 adults and 3 children in total, yes. The "in total" is implied.

What I'm getting at is... could a lawyer successfully argue that the condition was applied to the "immediate family" part only, and that "you" were outside of this qualification?
 
The way I would read it is myself, one other adult and my three children.

For me the keyword is it is saying MAX 2 adults, so no matter what it says before about you and your immediate family, it is still saying max 2 adults and 3 children.
 
The way I would read it is myself, one other adult and my three children.

For me the keyword is it is saying MAX 2 adults, so no matter what it says before about you and your immediate family, it is still saying max 2 adults and 3 children.

Agreed, presumably this is for some kind of workplace healthcare scheme? I have it which covers my family but once my kids are past 18 then they're not covered because they're adults.
 
Isn't that the max, so there could be 1 adult and possibly less children, some context is required.

I’m glad that you posted that, I was racking, (should that be wracking?), my brains as to why the OP asked the question, and thinking, “Do I expose myself as a complete idiot, by not knowing what was meant by the OP?”
 
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