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McGill vs. Non-McGill Descriptor Usage Chart - Language Analysis #1207059 (License: Personal Use)
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The chart displays percentage-based usage of subjective descriptors across three thematic groups: McGill-related terms (e.g., Killing, Throbbing), non-McGill terms (e.g., Bad, Massive, Worst), and profanity-laden expressions (e.g., F-Word, Stupid, Sucks). “Worst” dominates at 15%, significantly surpassing other descriptors, while McGill-associated terms remain relatively low-frequency and mild. The data suggests stronger emotional intensity in non-McGill and profane contexts.
Used in linguistics, UX research, or sentiment analysis articles to illustrate bias, tone, or lexical preference in user-generated content; matches user intent seeking empirical evidence on word usage trends or comparative language studies.
Related Cliparts: Visual analysis of descriptor frequency across McGill, non-McGill, and profanity categories-revealing “Worst” as the most used term at 15%. Explore linguistic patterns.
(view all McGill vs. Non-McGill Descriptor Usage Chart - Language Analysis)
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