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Abstract/Concrete
    Language
     Lesson:
Abstract Language
• Abstract terms refer to ideas or
  concepts; they have no physical
  referents.
      Ex. love, success, freedom, good,
  moral, democracy,
• These terms are fairly common and
  familiar, and because we recognize
  them we may imagine that we
  understand them—but we really
  can't, because the meanings won't stay
  still
Abstract Language: Example
• Take love as an example.
    Abstract: You've heard and used that
  word (Love) since you were three or
  four years old.
        1. Does it mean to you now what
  it meant to you when you were five?
        2. When you were ten?
        3. When you were fourteen ?
Abstract Language: Example
• How about freedom?
• The word is familiar enough, but when
  I say, "I want freedom," what am I
  talking about? divorce? self-
  employment? summer vacation? paid-
  off debts? my own car? looser pants?
  The meaning of freedom won't stay
  still
Concrete Language
• Concrete terms: refer to objects or events that
  are available to the senses. [This is directly
  opposite to abstract terms, which name things that
  are not available to the senses.]
•          Examples of concrete terms include spoon,
  table, velvet eye patch, nose ring, sinus mask, green, hot,
  walking. Because these terms refer to objects or
  events we can see or hear or feel or taste or
  smell, their meanings are pretty stable.
Abstract/Concrete:
            Comparison
• If you ask me what I mean by the word spoon, I
  can pick up a spoon and show it to you.
       [I can't pick up a freedom and show it to
  you, or point to a small democracy crawling
  along a window sill. I can measure sand and
  oxygen by weight and volume, but I can't
  collect a pound of responsibility or a liter of
  moral outrage.]
• While abstract terms like love change meaning
  with time and circumstances, concrete terms
  like spoon stay pretty much the same. Spoon and
  hot and puppy mean pretty much the same to you
  now as they did when you were four.
General/ Specific Terms
•   General and Specific Terms
•   General terms and specific terms are not opposites, as abstract
    and concrete terms are; instead, they are the different ends of
    a range of terms:
          1. General terms refer to groups;
          2. Specific terms refer to individuals—but there's room in
    between.

•   Let's look at an example.
             Furniture is a general term; it includes within it many
    different items. If I ask you to form an image of furniture, it
    won't be easy to do. Do you see a department store display
    room? a dining room? an office? Even if you can produce a
    distinct image in your mind, how likely is it that another
    reader will form a very similar image? Furniture is a
    concrete term (it refers to something we can see and feel),
    but its meaning is still hard to pin down, because the group
    is so large.
General/Specific Ladder
              Reducing General term
• We can make the group
  smaller with the less
  general term, chair.
  This is still pretty
  general (that is, it
  still refers to a group
  rather than an
  individual), but it's
  easier to picture a
  chair than it is to
  picture furniture.
General/Specific Ladder
                Reducing to more specific

• Shift next to rocking chair.
  Now the image is getting
  clearer, and it's easier to
  form an attitude toward
  the thing.
• The images we form are
  likely to be fairly
  similar, and we're all
  likely to have some
  similar associations
  (comfort, relaxation,
  calm), so this less
  general or more specific
  term communicates more
  clearly than the more
  general or less specific
  terms before it.
General/Specific Ladder
                 Tightening to specific

• We can become more and more specific. It can
  be a La-Z-Boy rocker-recliner. It can be a green
  velvet La-Z-Boy rocker recliner. It can be a lime
  green velvet La-Z-Boy rocker recliner with a cigarette
  burn on the left arm and a crushed jelly doughnut
  pressed into the back edge of the seat cushion. By
  the time we get to the last description, we
  have surely reached the individual, a single
  chair. Note how easy it is to visualize this
  chair, and how much attitude we can form
  about it.

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Abstract and concrete

  • 1. Abstract/Concrete Language Lesson:
  • 2. Abstract Language • Abstract terms refer to ideas or concepts; they have no physical referents. Ex. love, success, freedom, good, moral, democracy, • These terms are fairly common and familiar, and because we recognize them we may imagine that we understand them—but we really can't, because the meanings won't stay still
  • 3. Abstract Language: Example • Take love as an example. Abstract: You've heard and used that word (Love) since you were three or four years old. 1. Does it mean to you now what it meant to you when you were five? 2. When you were ten? 3. When you were fourteen ?
  • 4. Abstract Language: Example • How about freedom? • The word is familiar enough, but when I say, "I want freedom," what am I talking about? divorce? self- employment? summer vacation? paid- off debts? my own car? looser pants? The meaning of freedom won't stay still
  • 5. Concrete Language • Concrete terms: refer to objects or events that are available to the senses. [This is directly opposite to abstract terms, which name things that are not available to the senses.] • Examples of concrete terms include spoon, table, velvet eye patch, nose ring, sinus mask, green, hot, walking. Because these terms refer to objects or events we can see or hear or feel or taste or smell, their meanings are pretty stable.
  • 6. Abstract/Concrete: Comparison • If you ask me what I mean by the word spoon, I can pick up a spoon and show it to you. [I can't pick up a freedom and show it to you, or point to a small democracy crawling along a window sill. I can measure sand and oxygen by weight and volume, but I can't collect a pound of responsibility or a liter of moral outrage.] • While abstract terms like love change meaning with time and circumstances, concrete terms like spoon stay pretty much the same. Spoon and hot and puppy mean pretty much the same to you now as they did when you were four.
  • 7. General/ Specific Terms • General and Specific Terms • General terms and specific terms are not opposites, as abstract and concrete terms are; instead, they are the different ends of a range of terms: 1. General terms refer to groups; 2. Specific terms refer to individuals—but there's room in between. • Let's look at an example. Furniture is a general term; it includes within it many different items. If I ask you to form an image of furniture, it won't be easy to do. Do you see a department store display room? a dining room? an office? Even if you can produce a distinct image in your mind, how likely is it that another reader will form a very similar image? Furniture is a concrete term (it refers to something we can see and feel), but its meaning is still hard to pin down, because the group is so large.
  • 8. General/Specific Ladder Reducing General term • We can make the group smaller with the less general term, chair. This is still pretty general (that is, it still refers to a group rather than an individual), but it's easier to picture a chair than it is to picture furniture.
  • 9. General/Specific Ladder Reducing to more specific • Shift next to rocking chair. Now the image is getting clearer, and it's easier to form an attitude toward the thing. • The images we form are likely to be fairly similar, and we're all likely to have some similar associations (comfort, relaxation, calm), so this less general or more specific term communicates more clearly than the more general or less specific terms before it.
  • 10. General/Specific Ladder Tightening to specific • We can become more and more specific. It can be a La-Z-Boy rocker-recliner. It can be a green velvet La-Z-Boy rocker recliner. It can be a lime green velvet La-Z-Boy rocker recliner with a cigarette burn on the left arm and a crushed jelly doughnut pressed into the back edge of the seat cushion. By the time we get to the last description, we have surely reached the individual, a single chair. Note how easy it is to visualize this chair, and how much attitude we can form about it.