English, asked by jelynflorenososluiso, 4 months ago

generalize of communication​

Answers

Answered by pnpsujata
0

Answer:

Letters know

Explanation:

No explanation

Answered by ashumane
0

Answer:

In a generalization, the scope of a word or phrase is amplified or attenuated, covering a greater or lesser scope than it should. This is achieved by taking the scope to the limit and elements such as 'all', 'none' and 'every' are typically used, either as separate words or as partial words (such as 'everyone' or 'always'.

When speaking or writing, understand the deletions, distortions and generalizations you use and beware of them leading to mis-communication. If you can identify these omissions and corruptions in others, you can understand something of what they are are saying. You can also question them to get to the finer detail -- this can also be helpful to the other person in getting them to realize their inner thoughts and processes.

Chomsky (1955, 1975) described how what we say is often a long way from what we mean and that even generalization is a normal and often subconscious aspect of speech. This 'unrealized' nature makes it a potentially useful lever when changing minds.

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