Can a greeting be described as pleasant?

Updated on society 2024-08-04
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-15

    Yes, you can just use our happiness or use happiness, this is all possible, anyway, you can use this kind of happiness and happiness. Especially the greetings, happy hello, happy hello, the following is an extended material about greetings.

    Greeting is a polite act of communicating with friends and teachers with civilized language, smiling expressions or gestures, and greeting will enhance the distance and feelings between oneself and the other person, sometimes it can also relieve embarrassment, and sometimes it is also a kind of cue between people.

    Greeting [zhāo hu].

    A polite act.

    This entry is a polysemous term, with a total of 2 meanings.

    Greeting is a polite act of communicating with friends and teachers with civilized language, smiling expressions or gestures, and greeting will enhance the distance and feelings between oneself and the other person, sometimes it can also relieve embarrassment, and sometimes it is also a kind of cue between people.

    Chinese name. Greet.

    Foreign name. hello

    Part of speech. Noun.

    Pinyin. zhao hu

    Fast. Navigation.

    Basic ExplanationsCited Explanations.

    Pinyin phonetic. Zhuyin].

    Basic explanation. Beckoning: He's beckoning you, go see what's wrong?

    Greet with words, nods, gestures, etc.: when you meet the other side, you have to say hello. There were a lot of people at once, and I didn't know who to greet.

    Be careful: there is ice on the road, slipping.

    Cited explanations. Use words, gestures, or other means to solicit or call.

    Tang Zhao Yan "Ten No Poems to Guifu Yang Zhongcheng": "Nangong Xing in Eastern Province is not lonely, and it is greeted by poetry and wine. ”

    Song Su Shi's poem "New Brewed Cinnamon Wine": "Clean up the urn of the Tibetan Society in the small mountain, and greet the bright moon to Fangzhun." ”

    The twentieth chapter of "The Travels of the Old and the Disabled": "Send someone to the provincial capital to greet a big opera troupe, and beckon the cook of the North Pillar Tower to come, preparing to keep the old and disabled for the New Year." ”

    Wei Wei "Oriental" Part 3, Chapter 1: "I greeted him in the house, but he didn't hear it. ”

    Recruitment; Fund.

    Jin Yuan Hong's "Later Han Dynasty: Emperor Guangwu Ji VII": "Wei Naisi thinks so that the two are separated in order to divide their potential. Greet Xianbei and show financial gain. ”

    Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Shu Zhi, and Zhuge Birthday: "Later, Qiu Jian and Wen Qin rebelled, and sent an envoy to greet the people of Yuzhou. ”

    Say hello with words, nods, beckoning, saluting, etc.

    The second chapter of "The Travels of the Old Remnant": "This group of people came, greeting each other, some beating thousands of children, some of them making trouble, and most of them beat thousands of children. ”

    Zhou Libo's "The Storm" Part 1: "Lao Sun Tou followed the greetings of the car that came out of Yuanmaotun one after another, asking long and short questions, and answering non-stop.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-14

    Yes, it's nice to say hello, it's very customary!

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    Polite phrases such as "good" at the beginning, "please" at the end, "thank you" and "goodbye" at the end. The details are as follows:

    1. Say hello. Say hello when you meet someone, ask someone's surname and say your surname, ask someone's address and say your house. I have admired it for a long time, but I haven't seen it for a long time, and I have asked for help to say that I have worked hard.

    2. Inquiry. Ask someone and say please, ask someone to help and say bother, ask someone to answer and ask for advice. Ask someone to do something and say please, trouble others to say bother, begging people to say borrow light.

    3. Ask for advice. Please change the article to say that the axe is correct, accept the kindness and say that you appreciate it, and ask for guidance and advice. Say thank you for helping, take care of your health and congratulate you.

    4. Congratulations. The old man is said to be long-lived, unwell is said to be unsafe, and visiting others is said to be visiting. Please accept and laugh, give people ** to say Save, welcome to buy and say patronage.

    5. Praise. Praise people's opinions with high opinions, and use humble opinions for their own opinions. Visiting others with visits, guests come with visits. Accompany friends with Feng, and go first halfway with lost accompaniment.

    6. Hospitality. Waiting for the guest to wait, greet the apology with the unwelcome. Others leave with goodbye, and ask people not to send them to stay.

    China has a history of 5,000 years of civilization and is known as the "country of etiquette", and the Chinese are also known for their polite style. As an important part of traditional Chinese culture, etiquette civilization has had a wide and far-reaching impact on the development of Chinese social history, and its content is very rich.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Yes, it's okay, it's okay, it's okay.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Hello. [nǐ

    hǎo]

    Basic Definition. It is used to greet people politely or to show greetings when meeting people.

    Encyclopedia Interpretation. Pinyin [nǐ

    hǎo] as an honorific for greeting, as an opening sentence and common phrase for general conversations. This is also the most basic Chinese word.

    Check out the encyclopedia. English translation.

    hello;

    howare

    you;howdoyoudo

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Admire, long heard, honored.

    1 "Have you eaten? ”

    This is a relatively common greeting in Chinese history. In China's long feudal society, most of the labor sought to be able to eat a full stomach. Therefore, asking the other person if they have eaten is a kind of concern for the other person.

    With the improvement of the living standards of our people, the problem of eating has been solved, however, the greeting "Have you eaten" has been handed down. However, the current greeting has basically lost its original meaning. It's just a form, it doesn't contain the original content, and the greeting "Have you eaten" is just a greeting, "I see you, I say hello to you."

    As for whether the other party really got by or not, it doesn't matter. Therefore, in the more economically developed areas, the question of "have you eaten" is gradually replaced by a new greeting.

    Pay special attention to the occasion when using this saved greeting, and greet each other in the bathroom, which seems to be extremely poor in language and awkward to each other.

    2 "Why are you going? ”

    This is also a relatively primitive greeting, passing by the other person, in order to show that the other person has been seen, this language replaces all language. As for what the other party does, it doesn't matter, it's just a greeting. In the developed countries of the West, there is basically no such greeting, because "what do you do" is personal privacy, and they do not want others to interfere too much in their private affairs.

    This greeting appeared in China, and it also reflects a kind of mentality of the Chinese people, and with the development of the economy, this phrase will gradually be replaced by a new greeting.

    3 "Where have you made your fortune? ”

    This is a question that has only emerged in China in recent years. In China's long history, the concept of "a gentleman valuing righteousness rather than profit" has been deeply rooted in people's minds, but with the progress and deepening of China's reform and opening up, "profit" has been more and more valued by people, and the policy of "allowing some people to get rich first" has prompted the people of the whole country to become rich and bless each other with "getting rich". Therefore, this greeting truthfully reflects the cultural psychology of getting rich from top to bottom in recent years, and reflects the higher pursuit of the people after the first food and clothing, which is a kind of historical progress.

    4 "Are you busy all this time? ”

    Since the reform and opening up, the pace of our lives has been accelerating, and we are all busy and rushing for career, money, and life.

    For a long time, people liked to greet alumni, colleagues, and especially those of the same age, with "Are you busy these days?" I feel that this greeting not only reflects the mutual care between friends, but also seems very elegant and good. The interrogator does not have a substantive understanding of whether the other party is busy with work, but focuses on greeting.

Related questions
16 answers2024-08-04

First of all, it is necessary to have a correct understanding of greetings. Some people don't pay attention to greetings, thinking that people who meet every day don't need to say hello, some people think that people in their own family don't need to say hello, some people think that unimportant people don't need to say hello, and some people don't want to greet people first. >>>More

30 answers2024-08-04

Personally, I think it is more appropriate to call you hello when you meet elders or older people to show respect, and you can use hello to meet people of similar age or small proportions to appear close.

19 answers2024-08-04

When you add friends, you should greet politely, and report yourself to the door, let him know who you are, you can say hello, I'm so-and-so, it's nice to meet you.

17 answers2024-08-04

Don't see a customer walk in the door and start the introduction. That's what I'm going to run too. >>>More

5 answers2024-08-04

1. Daily greetings.

Everyday greetings are commonplace, such as: "Good morning! "Hello! "Great work! This kind of greeting, if used in the right place, will have a positive effect. >>>More