yes you did
You might want to recheck the meaning of "injection". One-to-one is a requirement. Onto doesn't matter.
Not all injections are bijections, but all bijections are injections.
Since injection AND surjection (bijection) is not the same as injection-only, not even a single bijection is injection-only AND not even a single injection-only is bijection, so "Not all injections are bijections, but all bijections are injections." is false.
...and I told you how they do.
Wrong, since <= is a non-strict inequality, no "meanings for strict equality and strict inequality of cardinalities follow directly" from your, so called, definition.
(1) You now need to define "strict" and "non-strict" as they apply to sets.
Ok.
If for bijection f : A → { 0 , … , n } |A| is some n, then |A| is called strict.
Cardinality is a measure of the number of members of set A, such that (A is finite iff |A| is strict) OR (A is non-finite iff |A| is non-strict).
By non-strict I mean that |A| is not any some n, since the number of members of set A is changed by successor operation.
You have provided no measure whatsoever, be it a relative or absolute measure.
I have provided two types of measures of the number of members of set A, where one provides a strict measure of the number of members of set A , and the other provides a non-strict measure of the number of members of set A.