English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

How do you tell the difference between a fantastic male friend and a guy who is interested in you but may be scared to stretch out of the friend zone?

What are examples of the behaviors and what separates these two things?

2007-08-21 22:15:32 · 4 answers · asked by §♫♪‹(•¿•)›☼»-(¯`v´¯)-»\\ 6 in Family & Relationships Singles & Dating

4 answers

ok, heres the answer this "fantastic guy" u like this guy thats why u called him fantastic.. and this other guy i'll guess u like him too but he is ur friend and he is scared to cross that friendship line...

2007-08-21 22:24:05 · answer #1 · answered by Aimee B 1 · 0 0

The Chinese and Japanese languages are honestly certainly not very similar to each and every different. They are greatly extra distinct than French and English, for illustration. While there are (stereo)average "appears" related to Korea, China, Japan, and many others., the simplest and such a lot correct approach to differentiate among folks from distinct East Asian international locations is accessory. It's simply the identical as for Europe, particularly. Although you perhaps ready to inform a German character from a French or English character simply by watching, style is honestly a larger clue than facial facets. The truly provide-away is consistently going to be the accessory. Even if you are particularly well at recognizing ethnic facets, this may not consistently let you know the nation the character is honestly from. There are for illustration ethnic Koreans who have been born and raised in Japan. There also are many folks who wouldn't have the average "appear" for his or her nation. A very visible difference is whether or not or no longer the character speaks a tonal language. Even if you do not talk a phrase of Chinese, it is convenient to appreciate that every one Chinese dialects (additionally Vietnamese and Thai) use version in tone to differentiate distinct phrases. Japanese is NOT a tonal language (neither is Korean). So you'll slender matters down rather a little bit simply by being attentive to tone. If you are ever simply loss of life to understand, you would simply ask the character wherein they are from or what their ethnic historical past is. It's exceptional to invite in an open-ended approach ("Where are you from?") as a substitute than bet ("Are you Japanese?"), on account that guessing the unsuitable nation can usually reason offense.

2016-09-05 09:50:45 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

the second one exists

2007-08-21 22:23:51 · answer #3 · answered by Robert B 5 · 0 0

you'll have to make a guess, or wait longer to guess better.

2007-08-21 22:21:07 · answer #4 · answered by Dave 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers