English, asked by niteshmourya55p2picl, 9 months ago

just to chat Question is what topic of chatting plaz ansewr earn points and marks as brainlist also
 {6}^{2}

Answers

Answered by gayathriraja2002
0

the topic of chatting maybe whatever you want it to be. i only have my concern with my points and the brainliest tag!!!

PS the answer of 6^2 is 36

Answered by Gouravvermaa
0

Explanation:

1. Be more interested.

If you want small talk to be more interesting, the surest route is to be more interested in your conversation partner. "If you are running out of things to say, you are not interested enough in the person you are talking with," insists angel investor Kai Peter Chang in the thread's most popular answer.

"If you don't fundamentally care about the person you are speaking with, that will show," he writes. "So the first fix is your own attitude -- if this is someone you don't care about that you are simply pretending to care about, cut your losses, say 'it's nice to meet you' (yes, lie) and move on."

Writer Ellen Vrana offers some advice: "Imagine a robot saying 'I find you interesting.' Creepy. Words alone don't work. To convey a genuine sense of interest, you have to emote. Lean forward. Make eye contact. Show them that you are listening and care."

2. Ask open-ended questions.

There's absolutely no trick that can make one-word answers exciting, so the only solution is to avoid them. It's all about phrasing, insists art director Craig Weiland. "When you ask someone a small-talky question, be aware of how the question is phrased, and always defer to open-ended structure in your phrasing of questions rather than ones with a simple yes or no answer," he advises.

"For example, 'Are you here with your family?' is a question that can be answered with a simple 'yes' and then you're left holding the bag again... 'Whom are you here with?' invites them to share new information of their own, introducing new subjects of conversation to discuss. If they reply, 'My family,' then you can ask about them, since the other party brought them into this themselves," he elaborates.

"Get out of small talk phase by asking simple questions that require more than one word 'yes/no' answers and pay attention to the responses," writes entrepreneur Daniel Da Vinci, concurring with both points one and two in a single sentence.

3. Leverage your environment (or your wardrobe).

Talking about the weather or the traffic is the classic example of this strategy, but there are other, less painfully cliched ways to use your environment as a conversational springboard. Software engineer Robert Rapplean suggests "commenting on something in your environment... their clothing or jewelry," for example.

It's a technique that's endorsed beyond Quora as well. On HBR recently, professional speaker (and therefore serial event attendee) Dorie Clark suggested a variation on this theme.

"Wearing a distinctive clothing item can be a great icebreaker, whether it's a Madeleine Albright-style signature brooch (which can spark a conversation about the trip to Italy where you bought it), a tie from your alma mater ('you're a Longhorn, too?!?'), or colorful socks," she writes, adding, that "you can also let your conversations be guided by someone else's sartorial choices. Psychologist Richard Wiseman wrote about one man with a unique networking strategy; to avoid habitually gravitating to people just like him, he would pick a color in advance and then make a point of seeking out people wearing that color to initiate conversations and make connections he otherwise wouldn't."

4. Play the student.

Small talk can seem pointless and unstructured -- and therefore totally painful -- but most everyone understands both the how and why of teaching. So one trick is to turn an aimless chat into a learning session.

"If there's a subject you're not familiar with, just be honest with that person and 9 out of 10 times they'll teach you about it,"

5. Gamify for your own amusem

6. Be more interesting.

7. Give up on lost causes

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