The items are rated on a five-point Likert scale, with "1" being "completely undescriptive of you" and "5" being "completely descriptive of you." One of the items is "I get so angry, I feel that I might lose control." Higher scores indicate greater trait anger.
It was also admitted that the initial letters were awkward and undescriptive. Not to be confused with Arriva, the bus company formerly known as North Western on Merseyside.
As the central protagonist, Lucy Snowe, finds on facing little Polly in Chapter 2, `When I say child I use an inappropriate and undescriptive term--a term suggesting any picture rather than that of the demure little person in a mourning frock and white chemisette, that might just have fitted a good-sized doll.' (2) This sense of the projection of uncanniness on to Polly, however, also works as an early piece of mirror identification, for though Lucy is several years older than Polly and, by the end of the book, Lucy is in her mid-twenties where Polly is in her late teens, Polly's main narrative function is to cast reflected light upon Lucy's past.
Each attitude pulls 'speakers and readers in directions opposite from the explicit', whether to 'the open horror of bloody wounds' or to 'the sheltered passivity of undescriptive verbiage'.
Its mainstream sensibility and potential as a high school date movie would have to be made manifest despite the undescriptive title and lack of important cast names and obvious selling points.
After that no one was so sure about the real world, so that when it came to keeping a color or an undescriptive shape at the cost of accurate representation, the latter lost.
For instance only 30 per cent cattle wealth of Sindh province is descriptive while 70 per cent is undescriptive. As a result the breeders get nothing from the 70 per cent of cattle growth and therefore it is necessary that the seedlings for artificial insemination should be imported to improve genetic values.