how d'u feel about handshake?
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how d'u feel about handshake?

 
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apprentice
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Posted: Sun Dec 11, 2005 9:44 pm    Post subject: how d'u feel about handshake? Reply with quote

Do you handshake or do you only bow?
What about your friends families bosses?

I am asking because we have just read and article in my reading classes at
Warsaw University dealing with this custom.

Regards,
Pawel
Poland
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Einde O'Callaghan
Guest





Posted: Sun Dec 11, 2005 10:35 pm    Post subject: Re: how d'u feel about handshake? Reply with quote

apprentice wrote:

Quote:

Do you handshake or do you only bow?
What about your friends families bosses?

I am asking because we have just read and article in my reading classes at
Warsaw University dealing with this custom.

I believe the only time when protocol demands a bow as a greeting in

Britain today is when you're introduced to the Queen - that's for men,
women should curtsey (spelling? I rarely if ever use the word). Usually
people shake hands when they first meet, when they meet again after a
long time, when they are saying goodbye for a long time and when they
strike a deal.

Regards, Einde O'Callaghan
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Phil C.
Guest





Posted: Sun Dec 11, 2005 10:50 pm    Post subject: Re: how d'u feel about handshake? Reply with quote

On Sun, 11 Dec 2005 16:35:14 +0100, Einde O'Callaghan
<einde.ocallaghan@planet-interkom.de> wrote:

Quote:
apprentice wrote:


Do you handshake or do you only bow?
What about your friends families bosses?

I am asking because we have just read and article in my reading classes at
Warsaw University dealing with this custom.

I believe the only time when protocol demands a bow as a greeting in
Britain today is when you're introduced to the Queen - that's for men,
women should curtsey (spelling? I rarely if ever use the word). Usually
people shake hands when they first meet, when they meet again after a
long time, when they are saying goodbye for a long time and when they
strike a deal.

Regards, Einde O'Callaghan

Kissing on the cheek is also becoming increasingly popular when men
meet or depart from women in informal circumstances but the social
"rules" seem rather fluid - whether to kiss or not, which cheek to
start with, how many kisses. It leads to much uncertainty - rather
like deciding how to address people in different contexts.
--
Phil C.
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Paul Burke
Guest





Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 3:38 pm    Post subject: Re: how d'u feel about handshake? Reply with quote

apprentice wrote:
Quote:

Do you handshake or do you only bow?
What about your friends families bosses?


I must repeat the good advice given to a visitor from abroad:

"When introduced to a Duke, grasp him firmly in the groin, twist, and
say 'How's things, you old bastard?'"

Paul Burke
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Nick Wagg
Guest





Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 5:29 pm    Post subject: Re: how d'u feel about handshake? Reply with quote

"apprentice" <mailpawel@wp.pl> wrote in message
news:f2d7e$439c3b80$d4ba586d$20262@news.chello.pl...
Quote:

Do you handshake or do you only bow?
What about your friends families bosses?

When meeting or parting:
I always kiss and hug my mother.
I usually kiss and/or hug my father.
I occasionally kiss my brothers but usually hug them or
shake hands.
I always kiss and sometimes hug female relatives and
close female friends of the family and of my in-laws.
I always shake my father- and brother-in-laws hands
and usually those of any other male relatives.

Other friends I greet with varying degrees of familiarity as suits
them.

I usually greet colleagues (whether peers, bosses or cleaning
staff) on arrival and departure but would only shake hands if I
had not seen them in a long time.

In a business context, I would normally shake hands when
introduced to someone and usually on parting.

Protocol demands that I bow to the Queen and shake her hand if
she were to initiate the gesture, but I have never yet met her and,
since I am a Republican, whether or not I would comply would
depend on how well-mannered I were feeling at the time or
whether I wished to deliberately cause offence.
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