English, asked by yashvigavankar854, 6 months ago

Describe the atmosphere of a busy airport, referring to particular people and situations that you observe. What can be seen and its effects? What can be heard and its effects? How it makes the observer feel?

Answers

Answered by ananyakumar10
5

Answer:

Explanation:

I overhear a man weeping as he is told, “I’m sorry, sir. The plane has already departed and you have missed the flight. There is nothing we can do.” People are constantly rushing to and fro. A young man trying to dodge all the people bustling about as he pushes his mom in a wheelchair. A young boy and his mom come out of a restaurant with rich chocolate ice cream dripping out his mouth. A little girl has fallen asleep on her dad’s lap with a white fluffy blanket to keep her warm.Exposure to prolonged or excessive noise has been shown to cause a range of health problems ranging from stress, poor concentration, productivity losses in the workplace, and communication difficulties and fatigue from lack of sleep, to more serious issues such as cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment, tinnitus

Answered by panchanathan37
2

Answer:A central function of nonverbal communication is the establishment and maintenance of interpersonal relationships. Nonverbal communication helps initiate relationships through impression management and self-disclosure and then helps maintain relationships as it aids in emotional expressions that request and give emotional support.

Professionals indicate that nonverbal communication is an important part of their jobs. Organizational leaders can use nonverbal decoding skills to tell when employees are under stress and in need of support and can then use encoding skills to exhibit nonverbal sensitivity. Nonverbal signals can aid in impression management in professional settings, such as in encoding an appropriate amount of enthusiasm and professionalism.

Although some of our nonverbal signals appear to be more innate and culturally universal, many others vary considerably among cultures, especially in terms of the use of space (proxemics), eye contact (oculesics), and touch (haptics). Rather than learning a list of rules for cultural variations in nonverbal cues, it is better to develop more general knowledge about how nonverbal norms vary based on cultural values and to view this knowledge as tools that can be adapted for use in many different cultural contexts.

In terms of gender, most of the nonverbal differences between men and women are exaggerations of biological differences onto which we have imposed certain meanings and values. Men and women’s nonverbal communication, as with other aspects of communication, is much more similar than different. Research has consistently found, however, that women gesture, make eye contact, touch and stand close to same-gender conversational partners, and use positive facial expressions more than men.

I overhear a man weeping as he is told, “I’m sorry, sir. The plane has already departed and you have missed the flight. There is nothing we can do.” People are constantly rushing to and fro. A young man trying to dodge all the people bustling about as he pushes his mom in a wheelchair. A young boy and his mom come out of a restaurant with rich chocolate ice cream dripping out his mouth. A little girl has fallen asleep on her dad’s lap with a white fluffy blanket to keep her warm.Exposure to prolonged or excessive noise has been shown to cause a range of health problems ranging from stress, poor concentration, productivity losses in the workplace, and communication difficulties and fatigue from lack of sleep, to more serious issues such as cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment, tinnitus

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