
thumb|300px|Sets of reference: Inclusive form (left) and exclusive form (right) In linguistics, clusivity is a grammatical distinction between inclusive and exclusive first-person pronouns and verbal morphology, also called inclusive "we" and exclusive "we". Inclusive "we" specifically includes the addressee, while exclusive "we" specifically excludes the addressee; in other words, two (or more) words that both translate to "we", one meaning "you and I, and possibly someone else", the other meaning "I and some other person or persons, but not you". While imagining that this sort of distinction
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).