Generator Land: direct address (vocative case) + intermittent appositive + inquiry or assertion
Title: direct address (vocative case) + intermittent appositive + inquiry or assertion
Descriptor: Contains few examples of unconditional positive regard.
Button: click
Background: Bubble because it seemed like the opposite of
this grammatical exercise, but rather representative of the
actual content.
Format:
mywords (name) +mywords (intermittent appositive) + mywords (assertion/question)
Total of Unique Results Possible: 84,000
Sample of Results:
Aubrey you clown: Can you count to 12?
Janet: You know where the door is.
Linda you slut: You should put your shoes on.
Melissa: It seems like me pretending to listen to you should be good enough.
Jeanne honey: Forget the acne treatments. Acne improves your looks.
Concept:A vocative expression is an expression of direct address
by which the identity of the party spoken to is set forth
expressly within a sentence.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it.
An inquiry is a question.
An assertion is a statement.
I wanted to work within what seemed to be a rigid frame work,
without using typical schoolroom content.
Title: direct address (vocative case) + intermittent appositive + inquiry or assertion
Descriptor: Contains few examples of unconditional positive regard.
Button: click
Background: Bubble because it seemed like the opposite of
this grammatical exercise, but rather representative of the
actual content.
Format:
mywords (name) +mywords (intermittent appositive) + mywords (assertion/question)
Total of Unique Results Possible: 84,000
Sample of Results:
Aubrey you clown: Can you count to 12?
Janet: You know where the door is.
Linda you slut: You should put your shoes on.
Melissa: It seems like me pretending to listen to you should be good enough.
Jeanne honey: Forget the acne treatments. Acne improves your looks.
Concept:A vocative expression is an expression of direct address
by which the identity of the party spoken to is set forth
expressly within a sentence.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it.
An inquiry is a question.
An assertion is a statement.
I wanted to work within what seemed to be a rigid frame work,
without using typical schoolroom content.