Unspecified Referential Index Flashcards
Unspecified Referential Index Negative Example:
(A phrase that deletes who is doing the acting. Using a general subject that doesn’t refer to a specific person. Frequent words: a person, someone, people, they, one, we. Also, generalizations which apply to classes or groups of individuals: “Americans, Catholics, Jews, managers, workers, men, women, etc.”)
A person could get really fed up with you.”
Unspecified Referential Index Positive Challenge:
“Which person?”
Unspecified Referential Index Negative Example:
(A phrase that deletes who is doing the acting. Using a general subject that doesn’t refer to a specific person. Frequent words: a person, someone, people, they, one, we. Also, generalizations which apply to classes or groups of individuals: “Americans, Catholics, Jews, managers, workers, men, women, etc.”)
“People don’t like you.”
Unspecified Referential Index Positive Challenge:
“Which people?”
Unspecified Referential Index Negative Example:
(A phrase that deletes who is doing the acting. Using a general subject that doesn’t refer to a specific person. Frequent words: a person, someone, people, they, one, we. Also, generalizations which apply to classes or groups of individuals: “Americans, Catholics, Jews, managers, workers, men, women, etc.”)
“One isn’t going to learn what one doesn’t know, is one?”
Unspecified Referential Index Positive Challenge:
“Which one?”
Unspecified Referential Index Negative Example:
(A phrase that deletes who is doing the acting. Using a general subject that doesn’t refer to a specific person. Frequent words: a person, someone, people, they, one, we. Also, generalizations which apply to classes or groups of individuals: “Americans, Catholics, Jews, managers, workers, men, women, etc.”)
“A man should at least open a woman’s door.”
Unspecified Referential Index Positive Challenge:
“Which man should open which woman’s door?”
Unspecified Referential Index Negative Example:
(A phrase that deletes who is doing the acting. Using a general subject that doesn’t refer to a specific person. Frequent words: a person, someone, people, they, one, we. Also, generalizations which apply to classes or groups of individuals: “Americans, Catholics, Jews, managers, workers, men, women, etc.”)
“A body has to wonder what’s going on in that brain of yours!”
Unspecified Referential Index Positive Challenge:
“Whose body?”