I believe there is already a fair amount of advice out there for instruction on how to properly compose a question on Stack Overflow. The onus of reading the material or simply understanding the format is on the user up front.
Once they begin composing their question or once it is finished, there is simply not enough information to say with certainty that their post would fall in one of the "sounds like a bad post" buckets.
Perhaps there would be a way to catch some percent of them, but that still leaves the remaining percent receiving a very annoying warning message with no reason. Not only would it annoy the users which did no deserve it, it would confuse many of them - potentially causing them to negatively alter their post.
I do not believe we should automatically detect and in turn advise people to avoid wording. The onus is on them to produce quality questions and do their research before composition.
The best automated effort towards improving posts from users is going to be the question wizard, but that is nowhere near completion and not even near the 6-8 week time window for consideration. In the mean time, anything which attempts to infer post quality by detecting one word or phrase is just not going to work.
Aside from automation, if as a user you observe a question which has several pitfalls included and are inclined to help, then editing the question would serve as the best way to offer such advice. Edit the question into a more appropriate shape and then leave a comment explaining why the pitfalls were removed. This will allow for the question to be in a state which should allow for being answered easier, and also will instruct the user on the common pitfall you observed and give them an example of how to remove it.