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Discover Ludwig"a hasty generalization" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
A hasty generalization is an assumption or conclusion drawn from limited evidence. For example, "She didn't get the job, so she must not be qualified for any job" is a hasty generalization.
Exact(5)
The proverbial "Jeddart justice," according to which a man was hanged first and tried afterward, seems to have been a hasty generalization from the solitary summary execution of a gang of rogues.
As marketers, we don't want to make a hasty generalization when defining our personas.
That's a hasty generalization but there's a lot of tiny people.
I do not consider it a hasty generalization, but rather as an ingenious hypothesis strongly supported by some striking facts and analogies, but which remains to be proven by more facts and the additional light which more research may throw upon the problem.
The view of some doctors that most tribal healers mixed allopathic drugs into their medicinal preparation was at best a hasty generalization.
Similar(54)
Is it unfair to ask whether making a hasty, contemptuous generalization about Muslims based on a tiny sample of them amounts to bigotry?
Addams was self-conscious about speaking for others: "I never addressed a Chicago audience on the subject of the Settlement and its vicinity without inviting a neighbor to go with me, that I might curb my hasty generalization by the consciousness that I had an auditor who knew the conditions more intimately than I could hope to do" (TYH 80).
Two new sophisms are included: one is imperfect enumeration, the error of overlooking an alternative, the other is a faulty (incomplete) induction, what we might call hasty generalization.
In view of the normal turnover numbers of the caveolar and noncaveolar pools found here (Results), we suggest that the hasty generalization of the existence of a nonpumping pool of Na+/K+-ATPase Na+/K+-ATPaseal epinhelia or other cell types normalto be renalaminepithelia
Most people recognize that Islamic extremists are merely a tiny sample of a massive Muslim population, but others are guilty of the fallacy of hasty generalization.
They include formal fallacies like affirming the consequent and denying the antecedent; and informal fallacies like ad hominem ("against the person"), slippery slope, ad bacculum ("appeal to force"), ad misericordiam ("appeal to pity"), "hasty generalization," and "two wrongs" (as in "two wrongs don't make a right").
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com