It’s nearly impossible to avoid narcissists. To spot them, notice the phrases they use. Here are the ones they love to use, ...
Since Angle and Saxon tribes brought their West Germanic dialect to Briton more than 1,500 years ago, and Old English was born, English has been a flexible, dynamic language — ...
All Britons know that when our fellow countrymen start a sentence 'With great respect...', they mean that they think the ...
Research by Trinity College London has revealed the top phrases used by UK residents to dodge confrontations and ...
A recent study found that Brits utter an average of 14 'polite-isms' a day to swerve unnecessary tension. Use our interactive ...
Living in a time when respect wasn’t optional has a way of shaping your attitudes for life. Those small gestures—like giving ...
A new study has revealed as many of 83 percent of Britons admit they avoid confrontation at all costs, but not that well.
In a candid interview with Max Chernov, German director Michaela, who’s spent nearly a decade in India, shared insights into ...
Politeness will get you far when traveling, but one European country lacks a word for "please." Here's how to sweeten your requests like a local.
Today, politeness is practically anathema. No one, in this country or abroad, seems to feel the necessity to act toward others with any form of courtesy, tactfulness, respectful and deferential ...
The Super Bowl-winning wide receiver shared the conversation in a recently deleted IG story, where Brown responded to the mother of his child's polite plea of needing help by saying, "F*ck u b*tch ...
It was picked up from the Scots and northeast English word ‘crack’, meaning loud gossip, banter or bragging. Craic then acquired its characteristic Irish spelling, and it has kept this since ...