The receipt culture is social policing. It demands ideological consistency (and, sometimes, binary thinking) from people. It asks that you remain static, predictable, and easily categorised, or you get socially ostracised, fair or not.
AI chatbots are teaching people writing patterns they would not use by themselves, and we are watching it happen. Thousands read and listen to AI generated content daily, and before you know it, that's the way to write!
My favourite has to be contrastive sentence structures like "it is not X, it is Y." A second favourite marker of AI writing is the abundance of subheaders. The longer the essay, the more it feels like it needs to chop them.
Perspectives of Pluralist Economies and Multi-Paradigmatic Approaches to Macroeconomic Issues, Challenges, and Policy Options for Sustainable Development
Essays in Honour of Sheriffdeen Adewale Tella
Edited by: Kolawole Subair
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I like the Nigerian adverb, ‘’kukuma’’.
I kukuma know that there is a short form known as ‘’kuku’’. While it is a short form, ‘’kuku’’ cannot always replace ‘’kukuma’’ in all sentences as it gives a slight modification.
E.g I will kuku do it- (I will do it but not now)
I will kukuma do it- ( Let me just do it now )
I really think it should be criminal to not send your wards/children to school to get basic education. Seeing adults that can’t read and write is really infuriating
@smartnakamoura They have no compulsion sharing data of loan defaulters, so that should not be a reason. I suspect the standardised framework and the reluctance to admit they'd been one-upped are the main reasons.