English, asked by js821534, 5 months ago

what is the possible result to bypassing the polite word in social intercourse?

Answers

Answered by saashareddy007
3

Answer:

‘His feeling is that the community needs the service as a place for social intercourse.’

‘Travel to almost any city or resort in Europe and you'll see Irish, Scots and Welsh in friendly social intercourse with the locals.’

‘Honestly, this constant social intercourse is just exhausting.’

‘Vanity is the cheese in the submarine sandwich of social intercourse.’

‘The Gaelic language ensures that even the most mundane of social intercourse became occasions of prayer.’

‘Ed is a lump whose idea of social intercourse is playing video games and practical jokes.’

‘Eye contact is essential for effective social intercourse.’

‘Ghanaian food is a currency for social intercourse: you walk into a person's home, therefore you are supposed to eat there.’

‘The people, she indicted, were not handsome and had no idea of the charms of friendly society or of social intercourse.’

‘But even this line of attack fails to separate cliché from the common forms of polite social intercourse.’

‘This obviously saves time and adds spontaneity to social intercourse.’

‘He was a perfectionist and he could be strict in social intercourse.’

‘What was expected of the government was friendship, social intercourse, and sympathy.’

‘Their language cuts through the niceties of social intercourse to fundamentals.’

‘As Europe's economy and society were relatively integrated, intellectual intercourse was easier than it seemed.’

‘Some of them talk indifferently about intercourse and interstate trade.’

‘Hunting, like the army, was in any case an extension of normal political intercourse and business.’

‘Such friendly intercourse was not the only way immigrants became native.’

‘The same is happening with the WTO's attempt to impose a systematic rule of law on international intercourse.’

‘Intellectually too, there seems to have been a surprising degree of intercourse between Europeans and the people of Lucknow.’

Similar questions