English, asked by lovi6826, 1 month ago

Write a five patterns answer of greetings and responce

Answers

Answered by anchitsingh40
0

Answer:

I first want to begin with the most basic and most casual greetings that we use. I've marked some of these with a star, like you'll see here. That means that when you respond to this greeting, you can use the same word, you don't need to worry about a special response. Just use the same word that you heard the person use when they greet you. These two, the casual friendly, "hey" and "hi," are very common. We use these with friends, co-workers, colleagues. It's fine to use at any time of day. I included "Yo" here as well. "Yo" is very casual. Probably, don't use this one at work, but you can use this with your friends, your close friends, and your family members if you like, "yo." When someone says "hey," just say "hey."

My life is going good. Everything is good. "Going" means happening. How is your life happening? How are things in your life?

. "Good afternoon" is a little more commonly used in workplaces or in, perhaps, client or customer relationship situations. For example, if I'm teaching a lesson and I see my students in the classroom, I come to the classroom, I say, "Good afternoon" to my students, because there's a little bit of distance there. "Good evening" as well. "Good evening" would begin a formal event. We could begin a formal event with "Good evening." We could use it at a restaurant, for example, again, in a customer client relationship. You could use it with friends and co-workers, I suppose, but it might sound a little too polite, "Good evening." It's not wrong, but it might sound a little bit formal. With friends, in the evening, we would probably just say, "Hey," or, "Hello," or "How are you?" That sounds a little more friendly. To respond to these, just repeat. Again, I've marked this with a star here. Just repeat. If someone says, "Good morning" to you, you can say, "Good morning." Something else we do here is we remove "good." This is to make it a little bit more casual, and we'll remove, as I did with doing down here, this apostrophe, we'll drop this "G" sound and add an apostrophe here. It's more difficult to do with afternoon. But, instead of saying, "Good morning," clearly pronouncing everything, we'll often drop "good" and say "Mornin'." There's no "G" sound there, "mornin’." I end on the "N" sound, or just "Afternoon," or "Evenin’." It sounds much more friendly, and it's not quite as polite, actually. If someone says this to you, like "Morning," you can just say, "Morning." You can use the "G" sound as well. It's up to you to choose. Some people ask what's the difference between "Good evening" and "Have a good evening." The difference is "good evening" is a greeting, a way to say "hello." "Have a good evening" is a way to say "goodbye." When you say, "Have a good day," you're saying "goodbye," actually. That's the difference. If you want to say "hello," please use "good evening." If you want to say "goodbye," use "Have a good evening." Also, please be careful. You'll notice "Good night" is not here. "Good night" is also a way to say "goodbye," or, especially for children, like from parents to children, a way to say the day is finished just before bed. "Good night" is used just before we go to sleep as well. Again, a goodbye. Please be careful. Not "have a good evening" or "good night." These are greetings we can use. "Good evening" is a much better greeting. Well, it's the correct greeting to use. Please use "Good evening," don't use "Good night."

Explanation:

please mark me as brainliest

Similar questions