You, John and Mike are together. You are telling John about something Mike said or did. If John knows you are talking about Mike - it's ok to say "he" "his" or "him". You don't need to preface each sentence with Mike's name.
No, the pronoun 'it' is a word that takes the place of a noun for a thing.
A polite address is a way of writing or talking to someone, in which you would use a prefixed title. Such as saying Dr. Whoever, or Mrs. Smith, it is the polite way to address someone.
It is a polite way of saying they had sex.
This is completely context dependent. "Likewise" basically means "the same to you." If someone says something polite to you, like "it was nice to meet you," then responding with "likewise" would be polite. If someone says something rude, then responding "likewise" would be equally rude. Tone is also important.
When you are having a polite disagreement with someone.
This is a polite way to answer a "thank you," by saying that you don't want to be thanked, for them not to mention what you did.
Grandmother: "obaasan", its the polite way of saying grandmother and you use it when referring to someone else grandmother, humble way of referring to your grandmother is "sobo" grandfather: "ojiisan", also the polite way of referring to another persons garndfather. humble way to refer to yours is "sofu"
-check me out on myspace,my email is... theworldneedsmorehugs@hotmail.com -taylor
A polite way of referring to someones obesity.
It is not polite to say "No, You are disgusting." But if this person is rude then you do have a right to say it. If not, its not polite.
Lloyd being polite does not have any connection to his sexuality. Politeness is a trait that can be present in individuals regardless of their sexual orientation. Sexuality is a personal aspect of someone's identity and cannot be determined solely based on their behavior or manners.
The likely word is civil (polite, or referring to a governmental function).
A polite address is a way of writing or talking to someone, in which you would use a prefixed title. Such as saying Dr. Whoever, or Mrs. Smith, it is the polite way to address someone.
Of course, it only means french-speaking person, it is as polite as calling someone an english-speaking one
yes ,of course it is
Suave and debonair!
The adverb for the word polite would be politely. This means been nice to someone.
Come in (plural you, polite or familiar in Spanish America; only polite in Spain) Present subjuctive (presente de subjuntivo): May they come in May you come in (polite or familiar in Spanish-America; only polite in Spain)