Use of generalisation in Sentences. 25 Examples

The examples include generalisation at the start of sentence, generalisation at the end of sentence and generalisation in the middle of sentence

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generalisation at the start of sentence


  1. Generalisation and abstraction, which reflect real-world relationships where objects can inherit properties from their parents, are supported.

generalisation at the end of sentence


  1. It is unwise to be hasty in generalisation.
  2. There are, happily, notable exceptions to this generalisation.
  3. Those who oppose or support GM crops per se make an unhelpful generalisation.
  4. This is a hard thing to say and I am of course aware that this, too, is a generalisation.
  5. The recommendations of the Redcliffe-Maud Commission were the major exception to this generalisation.
  6. As with all the economic forces affecting firms' behaviour, the impact of change is uneven and defies generalisation.
  7. One useful strategy in language learning is generalisation, but it is most noticeable when it exists as over-generalisation.
  8. It has to be possible to produce spontaneously original sentences which are based on implicit rules which allow generalisation.
  9. Even if marred by partiality and vagueness, this work is easily recognisable as theory, as explanation, not mere descriptive generalisation.

generalisation in the middle of sentence


  1. Too hasty a generalisation would have misled us.
  2. Every generalisation is arrived at, therefore, by induction.
  3. So the conditional theory is a generalisation of the causal theory.
  4. "This is a gross generalisation, but men focus more on one thing, " she says.
  5. That is a generalisation, as there have been effects since the silents in 1900.
  6. Incase a generalisation of this suggested mode of production would be met with strong popular resistance.
  7. One generalisation we can make, though, is that people get more satisfied with their jobs as they get older.
  8. Is joy, in contrast to sorrow, a more individual, idiosyncratic emotion about which generalisation is inappropriate?
  9. "A generalisation that faster growth will always compromise plant defence needs to be treated with caution," he warned.
  10. This generalisation, however, masks the fact that there are considerable variations from country to country in each of these regions.
  11. However, although our observations may back up this generalisation we cannot be sure that it applies to all Virgo's, only those we have observed.
  12. He said: 'As a generalisation, men are less emotionally intelligent than women and have not traditionally been encouraged to share their feelings.
  13. This is a generalisation, of course, butbroadly speaking Europeans view football more as a continuum, the USand Japanese as a series of discrete events.
  14. That is a generalisation, as there have been effects since the silents in 1900. But there was no special effects industry and effects-driven movies were rare.
  15. I know it's a generalisation, but I really believe that marriage is not as important for the British and most Europeans as it is for Americans, and the statistics support that view.
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