What are the commonalities or personalities of the phenomenon of polite behavior in Asian languages?

Updated on international 2024-04-17
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The commonality is to smile and thank you, smile and nod when you meet acquaintances, and then say thank you when you accept help from others, personality is that each country has its own customs and habits, it is right to follow the customs, and respect for others is also respect for yourself.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    I think that the polite behaviors in Asian languages such as bowing, bending, shaking hands, etc., all show great respect for others, and when you speak, you will add hello to others, which is also very respectful of others.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    In fact, in my opinion, the common characteristic of Asian polite behavior is that when inviting someone to a seat, they will stretch out a hand to make an inviting gesture, but I think there will be a lot of personality, such as some will hug and some will shake hands.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    will show themselves to each other, saying that they are very friendly, thinking that this is the common feature of polite behavior in various Asian languages, and Asians still pay more attention to etiquette, and they are more observant of etiquette.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The phenomenon of polite behavior is very common among various Asian languages. For example, after someone helps you, everyone will thank him and say thank you, but the pronunciation of the language is different. The content of the performance is still the same.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Among Asians, bowing means that there are many polite behaviors, Asians they are bowing to show politeness, of course, each has its own characteristics, Chinese like to shake hands, Thai people like to fold hands.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Asian languages say that polite behavior is basically there, hello, thank you, this is basically the world's universal, especially smile, smile can bring a lot of power to people, make people feel cordial, pull people into the distance.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    If you are polite to others, then you must be very modest, and it is okay to be polite to others in any country, the difference is that the way of expression is different, and the same is to express your heart.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Take Japanese as an example, Japanese has honorifics from the language itself, which is divided into honorifics, modest words, admonitions, etc., and verb conjugation can produce honorifics, which are relative honorifics, to distinguish internal and external relations, intimate and intimate relationships, and Korean are absolute honorifics. I don't understand anything other than Smecta.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    It can be divided into 4 types:

    1) Competitive speech acts. Such acts as "command", "request", "demand", "beg", etc. This type of behavior is inherently "impolite" or "rude".

    2) Conflict-like speech behavior. Such behaviors such as "threats", "accusations", "curses", "scolding", etc. This kind of behavior is inherently impolite, and there is no politeness at all when it comes to doing so.

    3) Harmonious speech acts. Such acts such as "offering", "inviting", "congratulating", "greeting", "thanking", etc. This type of behavior is consistent with the purpose that the speaker wants to achieve and the requirements of politeness, and the relationship between them is harmonious.

    4) Cooperative language behaviors. Such acts are such as "claiming", "reporting", "annocating", "imparting", etc. Both parties are concerned with how to deliver information most effectively, quickly, and maximally, so this type of behavior requires a high degree of cooperation and maximum compliance with the principle of cooperation.

Related questions
15 answers2024-04-17

Indicates that the remainder of 6 is taken.

In the C language, % stands for remainder (or modulo operation). >>>More

12 answers2024-04-17

This is an additive function I wrote that can judge overflow: >>>More

8 answers2024-04-17

First, the register position is different:

1. CS: ** segment register; >>>More

28 answers2024-04-17

Illegal. First of all, if int() is a function, it is obviously a duplicate of the keyword, so it is not a function. >>>More

11 answers2024-04-17

Valid variable names for the C language:

First, it can only contain numbers, letters, and underscores. >>>More