>>83010477>Yes, and my question, as originally put (sans the extra word) implies this without needing to clearly state the relatorThe problem here is that anon can love Immy regardless of if she says she's his little sister on Fansly or not, your question doesn't imply anything about that, it just asked about her schtick in regards to Fansly content.
>general, specified responseGeneral and specified are usually considered opposite to each other in terms of search parameters (which is what you'd be using when asking a question). General means "relating to all persons or things belonging to a group or category." "Specific" (specified is the action of being specific) means "of a special or particular kind." Asking for a "general, specified response" is asking for something that doesn't make sense because something cannot truly both be general and specific when asked for in this way because your result will be too broad to be specific and too narrow to be general.
>but that doesn’t make the sentence ungrammaticalGrammar is "the way the sentences of a language are constructed." If a sentence lacks a proper subject (and requires prior knowledge to get its true meaning), it is ungrammatical. Yes, writers do this quite frequently because it's common in everyday conversation (and is usually aided with people pointing at the things they're using indicatives for); literature isn't being graded by your primary school teacher, proper grammar isn't needed in creative works (and objective works tend to, in my experience, be made by lazy people who never paid attention in their English classes to know how to use a semicolon or to know how sentences should be formatted).
The big takeaway you should have, and the one I'll end with because I'm tired, is that you should never assume readers of your sentence know what you're talking about without overtly saying it (especially when you ask a question looking for an answer), because *someone* can get the wrong idea from it due to it being inherently open-ended and up to the end reader's interpretation.
Have a good night, anon.