English, asked by bhaskartechmaster106, 7 months ago

Imagine a place where no one says ''thank you'', ''sorry'', ''excuse me'' or any such words what would it be like living there what kind of society it would be? write an essay describing this place. Atleast in 100 words or 150 words

Answers

Answered by DibinDBN49
2

Answer:

Idiotic

Explanation:

Answered by aryanchaudhary2909
4

Answer:

hear the Japanese are very polite. Is it true?”

I can’t tell you how many times people have asked me this, especially on trips home to the United States. Many Americans imagine a country full of people saying, “Excuse me,” “Thank you” and “Please” every other sentence. But of course, that’s not true; the Japanese use these phrases in every sentence. At least once.

Take, for instance, the double and triple “Thank you.” One thing that surprised me when I first came to Japan was not that the Japanese always say Thank you, but that they feel just one thank you isn’t nearly enough, even when expressing gratitude for the smallest thing. Next time you leave a Japanese restaurant, count how many times the staff thanks you for coming. Then count the number of times each individual staff member, at various volumes, thanks you. You’ll feel like you’ve won the Thank You Lottery.

In English we have “Thanks again,” meaning that we’ve already thanked and are letting you know that we realize this and are thanking you again. If we thanked a third time, I wonder what we’d say. Perhaps “Thanks a triple.” But the Japanese don’t worry about how many times they’ve thanked you. They just keep on thanking. Indeed, thanking is the gift that keeps on giving. And thanking.

And what I love is that the word “thank you” in Japanese has what is basically a past tense. So, “arigatou gozaimasu” is “thank you” while “arigatou gozaimashita” is “thank you for what you just did.” And please don’t confuse the two, thank you.

But an even more important word, in my opinion, is “sumimasen.” This is, hands down, the No.1 most convenient Japanese word to know in Japan. Officially, it means “Excuse me,” but it also means “Sorry,” and even, you guessed it, “Thank you.”

Similar questions