How to Find the Implied Main Idea
Finding the implied main idea is easier if you think of
the passage as a box. Inside the box, is a random group of stuff (the details
of the passage). Pull each item from the box and try to figure out what they
each have in common. Once you've figured out what the common bond is among each
of the items, you'll be able to summarize the passage quickly.
Here’s how to find the implied main idea:
- Read the passage of text
- Ask this question to yourself: "What
do each of the details of the passage have in common?"
- In your own words, find the common bond
among all the details of the passage and the author's point about this
bond.
- Compose a short sentence stating the
bond and what the author says about the bond.
Step
1: Read the Implied Main Idea Example:
When you're with your
friends, it's okay to be loud and use slang. They'll expect it and they aren't
grading you on your grammar. When you're standing in a boardroom or sitting for
an interview, you should use your best English possible, and keep your tone
suitable to the working environment. Try to gauge the personality of the
interviewer and the setting of the workplace before cracking jokes or speaking
out of turn. If you're ever in a position to speak publicly, always ask about
your audience, and modify your language, tone, pitch and topic based on what
you think the audience's preferences would be. You'd never give a lecture about
atoms to third-graders!
Step
2: What's the Common Thread?
In this case, the author
is writing about hanging out with friends, going on an interview, and speaking
publicly, which, at first glance, don't seem to relate to each other that much.
If you find a common bond among all them, though, you'll see that the author is
giving you different situations and then telling us to speak differently in
each setting (use slang with friends, be respectful and quiet in an interview,
modify your tone publicly). The common bond is speaking, which will have to be
part of the implied main idea.
Step
3. Summarize the Passage
A sentence like
"Different situations requires different kinds of speech" would fit
perfectly as the implied main idea of that passage. We had to infer that
because the sentence doesn't appear anywhere in the paragraph. But it was easy
enough to find this implied main idea when you looked at the common bond
uniting each idea.

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