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Why Would You Call Someone

What would you call someone from mercury?

Mercury - Mercurian or Hermean
Venus - Venusian
Earth - Earthling or Terran
Mars - Martian
Jupiter - Jovian
Saturn - Saturnian
Uranus - Uranian
Neptune - Neptunian

Pluto - Plutonian

Sun - Solarian
Earth's Moon - Lunarian or Selenite

Why would you call someone at 1am,dead drunk?

probably not if i were dead

What do you call someone who is in their 60s?

I don’t believe this question concerns the manners a person displays when talking to a person in their sixties. I believe it refers to the label belonging to persons in their sixties. Example, a person in their eighties is called an “octogenarian”Septuagenarian, octogenarian, ....AnswerLarry asked about a word for a person who is ninety+ years of age.As you may know, the word for a person in their seventies (70's) is septuagenarian.The word for a person in their eighties (80's) is octogenarian.And the word for a person in their nineties (90's) has the same ending as the other two: nonagenarian.Here is a sample sentence with nonagenarian:Last year, when my neighbor became a nonagenarian, she decided she was too old to live by herself, and moved in with her daughter.This answer came from the Miriam Webster Learner’s DictionaryJane Mairs, Director of English language Learning Publishingsexagenarian - Wiktionaryhttps://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/sexagenarianBeing between the age of 60 and 69, inclusive. In one's seventh decade. ... sexagenarians). A person who is 60 years old or between the ages of 60 and 69.

What's the most times you should call someone?

Depends - ask yourself the following questions first:What is the underlying reason(s) for placing the phone call(s)?What time of day are you making the call(s)? What do you expect the person to be doing at the time of the call(s)?Does the person speak the same language as you, or will a translator need to be present at the time of the call(s)?What is the presumed opportunity cost of placing each additional call after the first one? I.E. What else could you be doing instead?Based on the person's area code, will the call be long distance?Will you be using a landline or a cellphone? What type of phone plan do you have?Taking into consideration your answers from Question 5 and 6, what charges will you incur for each unanswered call?If and once answered, how long do you expect the call to last? I.E. what is the approximate expected duration of the call (in hrs/mins)Assuming each unanswered call takes 30 seconds to place, what is the maximum number of unanswered calls you are able to place before you no longer have sufficient time to maintain the full duration of an answered call (as computed in question 8)?Why are you wasting time overthinking this when you could be placing calls right now?

Should you text and ask if you can call someone or do you just call them?

It is up to you to guess if who ever you are dating will prefer you to text and ask or not. It's simply part of the game. Some people choose to neglect this, but I would also consider taking that into account as part of the game. Personally I would take the purpose of calling in to account. Do you expect it to just take two minutes? Do you think the person you are calling will need their calander to answer your question or are they able to remember of the top of their head when they will have time to see you? But as much as it might not seem as smooth, texting is the safe choice and it has it's own charm. Besides, if the person you are calling is a tiny bit nervous then it's nice to know that you are calling.

Is it okay to call someone fat if they call me skinny?

I've been called skinny many times, but the other day an overweight person said "you're so skinny" and kinda laughed about it so i said "you're so fat" then they got all mad and offended. ..so wtf?

What do you call someone who says “thank you” way too much? What word would you use to describe them?

I call it getting stuck in the “circle of thank you’s”. I’m not sure if there’s one word to describe a person who says “thank you” too much, but you’ll know when you’re stuck in the circle.Them: “Thank you for doing xyz for me!”Me: “Anytime! Glad to help”Them: “Thank you. I appreciate it.”Me: “You’re welcome.”Them: “Thank—“Internal voice: Runnnnnn!! Before they say it again!! Don’t look back. Never look back.Politeness is great. Underrated even. But there’s a point where it’s too much…and it’s like getting stuck behind the slow car in the fast lane. Time to get going!

What do you call someone from Bergen, Norway?

People from Bergen are called
- bergensere -
in Norwegian. This is the plural form. If you are talking about only one person, you would say he/she is a
- bergenser -

When can you call someone by their first name in Japan?

As others have said it’s uncommon for Japanese people to use first names with each other, and it can be very tricky for foreigners. One thing that makes it difficult is that Japanese people will often be much freer about calling you, the foreigner, by your first name - maybe because you introduce yourself that way, or maybe they just assume that they should.I would never call a Japanese adult by his/her first name unless specifically asked to do so. That rarely happens unless the person is wanting to speak to me in English, and they speak it well - perhaps have lived abroad.I have a handful of close Japanese friends I call by first name+san. They are all either female friends I have known for a very long time, or the Japanese husbands of foreign friends (which is a special situation). These are also the only friends my husband calls by first name as well - because we are all very close and/or we often speak English as a group. He doesn’t even call his best Japanese friend from college by his first name, but calls him only by his last name without -san or -kun, which shows their closeness. His best friend at work, who is a few years younger, he calls last name -kun.So, you can see that it’s quite rare for adults to use first names unless they are very, very close, and even then not always.My advice is to stick to last names unless requested to do otherwise, and/or until you are super close with someone. When you will mainly be speaking in English with someone it’s usually OK to go with the name the person uses when making introductions.

How often do you call someone and they don't pick up?

When it comes to calls, I have certain rules which makes my life easier:I never call anyone after 9pm unless it’s an absolute emergency, a family member or possibly work.Unless is any of the above, I will call a person twice before I stop calling. I would usually after the second call I will send some other kind of communication (text, vmail, email) staying I called a couple of times and I will await for them to call back.Depending on who it is, after a few weeks/months I MIGHT reach out just to see if they are not dead (or maybe lost my communication information or maybe something else happened).After all of this, if i get no response, I remove them from my phone.

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