I didn't see the comment I responded to as a joke. Your
statement below is true in fiction when writers are
attempting to "characterize" a character but not necessarily
in the real world. You are free to make assumptions, of
course, about the guy next to you at the stop light with the
expensive car but it is, just that, an assumption.
Richard Moore
--- In
rara-avis-l@yahoogroups.com, "Jack Bludis"
<buildsnburns@...> wrote:
>
> It started out as a joke and we got serious, but
yes,
> the kind of car, the use or non-use of a car, and
the relativity of
> the car to any persons environment does help
"Characterize" him or
her.
>
> Jack Bludis
>
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