An overly broad pronoun reference occurs when the antecedent of a pronoun is one or more general ideas or concepts instead of a single noun or simple noun phrase.
Examples:
The train finally arrived late and jam packed, so we were late. It was a hassle.
its horrible and hard
This is an overly broad and vague question.
An example of an overly broad reference in Apex could be a class or method that uses a generic type without any constraints, such as List<Object>. This could lead to confusion and potential runtime errors since it allows any object type, making the code less type-safe and harder to understand. Instead, specifying a more concrete type would improve clarity and ensure that only compatible objects are processed.
overly broad reference
That is an overly broad question, covering every answer in this category and many more.
Howard Gardner
I think this is an overly broad question that requires some context. There are several ways I can think of to interpret the question.
An overly broad pronoun reference occurs when the antecedent of a pronoun is one or more general ideas or concepts instead of a single noun or simple noun phrase.Examples:The train finally arrived late and jam packed, so we were late. It was a hassle.What was a hassle? The train's lateness, that it was full, or that it made you late? 'The whole situation was a hassle.' should be used instead of the pronoun'it'. You can say, 'The whole situation was a hassle. It spoiled my day.' In this case, the clear antecedent for the pronoun 'it' is 'situation'.When the car hit the mailbox, it was damaged.What was damaged, the car, the mailbox, or both? Instead of '...it was damaged.', use '...the mailbox was damaged.', or '...both were damaged.'
The unclear reference in the sentence is "Learning to understand the world from different perspectives." It is not clear what aspect of understanding the world the sentence is referring to - is it through education, experience, or some other means? Clarifying this will make the message more precise.
An overly broad pronoun reference occurs when the antecedent of a pronoun is one or more general ideas or concepts instead of a single noun or simple noun phrase.Examples:The train finally arrived late and jam packed, so we were late. It was a hassle.What was a hassle? The train's lateness, that it was full, or that it made you late? 'The whole situation was a hassle.' should be used instead of the pronoun'it'. You can say, 'The whole situation was a hassle. It spoiled my day.' In this case, the clear antecedent for the pronoun 'it' is 'situation'.When the car hit the mailbox, it was damaged.What was damaged, the car, the mailbox, or both? Instead of '...it was damaged.', use '...the mailbox was damaged.', or '...both were damaged.'
It occurs when a writer uses overly specialized language to communicate with a general audience.
Reference maps and Thematic maps are the broad categories of maps