Liaise
It is liaise. One who does it is a liaison.
The correct spelling is liaise.Some example sentences are:We will liaise with the family about these matters.Please liaise with the media later.
The word "liaise" means to work with someone in a professional way. The end benefit should be mutual, and it is normally in a positive spirit to achieve common goals.
Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.
Liaise
It is liaise. One who does it is a liaison.
to liaise is to communicate with someone on a joint project
The correct spelling is liaise.Some example sentences are:We will liaise with the family about these matters.Please liaise with the media later.
to connect, communicate (usually followed by with)
The word "liaise" means to work with someone in a professional way. The end benefit should be mutual, and it is normally in a positive spirit to achieve common goals.
That is the correct spelling for the rarely-used form "liaised" (coordinated).The noun form liaison is more widely used than the verb to liaise.
lā-əs, ˈlī-əs
Lease, you sign a lease agreement with a finance officer if your credit is very good.
It's "liaising" (three i's) from the root liaison, which comes from the French.
When you liaise you negotiate with someone. You talk to them they talk back and you find something out you wanted to at the end. You could also say it is a word for conversation. If you use this word when doing an essay or something and you use it in the correct context you could get a really good mark/score! ;D
Interact, Interface, Be in contact, meet, liaise, converse