Don't understand this English assignment

Don't understand this English assignment?


"Clustering Assignment 

First, pick a topic. Then write down words or phrases associated with this topic. Next, identify them into main or supportive thoughts. Submit all your steps - it should resemble something like this: 

Topic = Words or phrases associated with this topic 

My list of word words or phrases for main thought 

My list of words or phrases for supportive thought" 

Could I get an example of what this is supposed to look like? This is my first assignment for the year and I have no idea what I'm supposed to do. The assignment is supposed to be turned in tomorrow and I'd appreciate anything that could help. 

Thanks!!


Answer :Since this is a English assignment, what better subject than something of a related to English! 
You could write about Internet language and internet slang and how this new language words and phrases have changed our everyday conversation....... 
Let us twit a bit, what is you email address, have you chat ,why aren't you in facebook, read message in myspace.com and hundreds phrase like these.. 
I will copy/paste some of slang from Yahoo search for you to see what I am talking about. you could read them yourself. just type internet slang in Yahoo search.....The materials are very well written. You could just copy/paste for your assignment or just memorize Some of the terms and abbreviations used in internet slang appear to derive from fanspeak, the slang of science fiction fandom. A significant portion of computer programmers and users have historically been science fiction readers. 

In 1975, Raphael Finkel of Stanford University compiled a collection of hacker slang, the Jargon File, from technical cultures, such as the MIT AI Lab, the Stanford AI Lab (SAIL) and others, of the old ARPANET AI/LISP/PDP-10 communities. Two items on this list in current use as Internet slang are "flame" and "loser". By 1990, the Jargon File had been enriched with examples of smallhand used in talk mode between 2 terminals, (for example, "BTW", "FYI", and "THX") as well as some slang expressions in use on Usenet and new commercial networks like CompuServe (for example, "LOL", "ROTF", and "AFK"). 

A Computerworld article, discussing the origin of several current web slang terms, cites a still-online FidoNet article from 1989, which displays emoticons in addition to all-caps shortcuts like "LOL", "BRB" and "TYT". 


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