Not necessarily, it would certainly be harassment. If the person is calling to check up on your whereabouts all the time, this is a controlling and/or abusive behaviour and could potentially lead to stalking
It depends how well you know them and what the phone conversations are like.
depends how many times you have looked
No, if u text only a few times a day your not stalking, just curious or nosy or u just like them :)
Stalking is a form of mental assault, as the stalked can feel insecure at times when they feel a sense of the stalker stalking them. In some cases, stalking can lead to sever depression, guilt, anxiety and even suicide. Attacking somebody mentally is just as bad as attacking them physically
the police have to see if the stalker has had any past stalking times/ restraining orders
The word is spelled stalk, just like the stalk of a plant. Most times, for following a person, people use stalked or stalking.
If it is done sevaral times then yes, if its just once then its not bullying, its just pointless.
There is a difference between calling a girl a couple of times a day just to say ILY and calling a girl every half an hour. I call the latter obsessive stalking and that just shows me he's crazy. He can't respect my personal space and that is usually the sign for me to get out before things go further.
During intercourse it means he is highly enjoying you sexually and says the names as a mean of expressing his pleasure.
Yes you can ask but the chances of you being transferred is slim to none. I called Dell a few times and got foreign country and asked and was not able to be transferred they told me to keep calling back until I reached someone in the US.
I do not have people calling me several times a day. I am on the no call list.
In the King James version the word - call - appears 195 times the word - called - appears 625 times the word - calledst - appears 4 times the word - callest - appears 3 times the word - calleth - appears 30 times the word - calling - appears 24 times
In a live performance, the lighting cues have to fire at precise times, and those times have to be called by one person. The person who calls lights at a theatrical performance is the stage manager, and at a concert, it is usually the lighting director. One of these two people is responsible for staying on the headset and calling for cues to be executed to the light board operator and to the spotlight operator. This is known officially as "calling the light cues", but for short we call it "calling the lights".