There are a couple of choices: Rumor? Slander?
The first person is the person speaking. The second person is the one spoken to. The third person is the one spoken about. The similarity is that they are all persons.
Cockney is the colorful dialect spoken in the East End of London.
The person for pronouns are:First person, the speaker (I, me, we, us)Second person, the one spoken to (you)Third person, the one spoken about (he, him, she, her, it, they, them)
To pronounce the name Ananias, one must say it as a-NAN-ee-ess. The a is spoken in the lower case sound, the nan is spoken as it sounds, the ee is spoken as the letter e is spoken, and the ess is spoken as the letter is spoken
The word 'you' is a pronoun, a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun (name) for the person (or persons) spoken to.An adjective is a word that describes a noun.Example: You have a new car. (the adjective 'new' describes the noun 'car')
slander
depends on the context it is in.....if it is written, it is called libel, if it is spoken, it is called slander
Defamation. It includes libel (written false statement) and slander (spoken false statement) where a person intentionally spreads falsehoods about another person to harm their reputation.
Defamation is speech that wrongfully damages a person's reputation. It includes both slander, which is spoken defamation, and libel, which is written defamation. To prove defamation, the statement must be false, harmful to the person's reputation, and communicated to a third party.
Slander- Spoken false statement that damage another person's reputation.
Defamation is the act of making false statements to harm someone's reputation. It can be in the form of libel (written) or slander (spoken). Legal action can be taken if the false statements are damaging to the person's reputation.
The term for spoken lies about a person is "slander." Slander refers to making false spoken statements that harm someone's reputation.
One. Mono means single.
The past participle of "spoken" is "spoken." For example, "I have spoken to her before."
Slander is a spoken false statement that damages a person's reputation. It involves making malicious or false statements about someone with the intention of harming their reputation.
"Yes, Chase customer service have a good reputation and I know this because I have spoken to them in person and over the phone before. They are very willing to help you."
The correct form would be "spoken." For example: "She has spoken to the manager about the issue."