@OokandGluk is spot on!
Even in our everyday speech, when we use "generally", we are typically trying to pass off something as a factual truth.
For instance - "generally, countries that have huge military spending tend to be military superpowers"
This is me trying to say - "here is a fact. Typically (generally), it so happens that countries that have hige military spending also happen to be military superpowers." I as the author am trying to present this statement as a factual truth.
I could state the same fact this way - "90% of countries that have hige military spending also happen to be military superpowers.".
Both these sentences mean the same for all practical purposes. I (the author) am telling you that typically, X is the situation.
So ->" Companies that outsource generally dismantle some of theircapabilities ".
This is the author telling us that typically (say, for example, in 70% of cases), companies that outsource
...
Even in our everyday speech, when we use "generally", we are typically trying to pass off something as a factual truth.
For instance - "generally, countries that have huge military spending tend to be military superpowers"
This is me trying to say - "here is a fact. Typically (generally), it so happens that countries that have hige military spending also happen to be military superpowers." I as the author am trying to present this statement as a factual truth.
I could state the same fact this way - "90% of countries that have hige military spending also happen to be military superpowers.".
Both these sentences mean the same for all practical purposes. I (the author) am telling you that typically, X is the situation.
So ->" Companies that outsource generally dismantle some of theircapabilities ".
This is the author telling us that typically (say, for example, in 70% of cases), companies that outsource
...
Statistics : Posted by HarshR9 • on 03 Apr 2024, 22:06 • Replies 10 • Views 1211