<span>false cause
When a speaker or writer tries to  connect two things that don't directly  have an effect on each other as having an effect on each other, it is false cause. Saying that one thing directly causes another when there is no proof or factual evidence to back that up weakens an argument significantly. </span>
        
             
        
        
        
He thought that he knew a lot about witchcraft so he had more people arrested because he was Christian and thought when one was found the rest needed to be hunted for as well. he started the peak of it if you will
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The internalized attitudes, expectations, and viewpoints of society is called generalized other.
In sociology, generalized other is described as an individual's internatilized impression and expectation of other people in society. The term derives from George Herbert Mead's "The I and the Me" theory. 
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The letter "g"
hope it helps!