Here is a sentence using the word general: Tim was promoted to a General in the Army.
The fire alarm sent the preschoolers into a state of general panic.
The Receiver General for Canada is currently unavalable for comment.
What was the general tone of the question? How can I give a general answer to such a direct question?
The sentence, When we do the research we find either too much material to use or not enough is not a complex sentence because the word either is used.
A sentence is too general when you use too many pronouns. Tis only applies if it is out of context, though. For example: He knew she was thinking about it. If you hear this sentence by itself, you don't know who he is, who she is, or what it is. If this was in a paragraph, It may be obvious what these things are, but by itself the sentence is very vague.
The host's speaking style is too stilted to appeal to a general audience.
Here is a sentence using the word general: Tim was promoted to a General in the Army.
America is tough. The sentence is too general to be of much use to a reader. What part of America is tough? Specifically, how is America tough? What makes it that way? Details always help to reduce the breadth of a sentence.
Example sentence - The general topic of discussion was tolerance.
Example sentence - The general theme of the discussions was apparently not applicable to the circumstances.
Too general means too broad or vague. For example, "Which vegetables do you like?" "I like green vegetables." Although the sentence is not wrong, it is much too general if you assume the asker wants to know specific or certain vegetables that you like. Too specific is the opposite of too general, meaning it is too precise and definite. For example, "What do you want for Christmas?" "I want an Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action Two-Hundred-Shot Range Model Air Rifle!" Although the sentence is not wrong, it is much too specific. Irrelevant means off-topic, or not pertaining to the point or topic at hand. For example, "Please write about Pearl harbor." "The Gulf War...?" Although an extreme example, it shows what an irrelevant sentence is, because the incident at Pearl Harbor and the Gulf War are unrelated topics, therefore it would be irrelevant to talk about the Gulf War for a question asking about the incident at Pearl Harbor.
too narrow
The General went to the general store.
You can only end a sentence with too not to.
I find it too hard to remember whether to use "to" or "too" in a sentence.
yes It is too big. This is a complete sentence.