£¬ ±»²»ÊìµÄÈ˳ÆÎª¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±£¬Äãϰ¹ßÂð£¿
 
¡¶¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û¡·ÔÓ־ȫ²¿²úÆ·¿ªÍ¨ÁËÍøÉ϶©ÔÄ¡£Í¨¹ýаæÍøÕ¾µÄÊéµêÈë¿Ú£¬¼´¿ÉÔÚÏß¶©ÔÄ¡¶¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û¡·ËùÓаæ±ð¡£
±à¼­²¿ÁªÏµµç»°£º
³õÖб༭²¿£º04353940570
¹ã¸æ²¿µç»°£º04353940521
Óʹº²¿µç»°£º04353940797
  ÄúÏÖÔÚµÄλÖ㺠¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û >> Ñ§Ï°ÖÐÐÄ >> ÐÝÏÐÓ¢Óï >> ÕýÎÄ
±»²»ÊìµÄÈ˳ÆÎª¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±£¬Äãϰ¹ßÂð£¿
×÷Õߣºmaisie    ÎÄÕÂÀ´Ô´£º±¾Õ¾Ô­´´    µã»÷Êý£º    ¸üÐÂʱ¼ä£º2009-12-8

 [ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û Sb]MMo\wy*Km@qYK,FroG]

±»²»ÊìµÄÈ˳ÆÎª¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±£¬Äãϰ¹ßÂð£¿[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û =ib0r#C+d]Ct/.VE@ +FroG]

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û ?qDu@F*u'lG ) FroG]

For me, one of daily challenges is being addressed as "sweetie" or "hon" by complete strangers.

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û xog lm|' ^KG*FroG]

¶ÔÎÒÀ´Ëµ£¬ÓÐÒ»¸öÈÕ³£µÄС·³ÄÕ¾ÍÊDZ»Ò»¸öȫȻ²»ÈÏʶµÄÈ˳ÆÎª¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±»òÊÇ¡°ÌðÐÄ¡±¡£

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û Oi4(€^T9PmLqyq+FroG]

I get this regularly--from the coffee-cart vendor or department store salesperson, on the phone or at a doctor's office. Since when do strangers feel they can address others with such familiarity?

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û hiXlj9 H$W$b6$OJ^2;FroG]

ÎÒ¾­³£±»Âô¿§·ÈµÄС··»ò°Ù»õÉ̵êÊÛ»õÔ±Õâô½Ð£¬Ôڵ绰Àï»òÊÇÔÚÒ½Éú°ì¹«ÊÒÀïÒ²³£ÕâÑù¡£´Óʲôʱºò¿ªÊ¼£¬Ä°ÉúÈ˸оõËûÃÇ¿ÉÒÔÓÃÕâÑùÊìïþµÄ³Æºô½Ð±ðÈ˵ģ¿

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û c 1J ?/|h1eu4@}FroG]

It rankles that some of the people I get this from are young enough that I could pass for their mother--that is, if I had had kids early. I understand the attempts to be friendly or convey warmth, but would the salesperson or vendor addressing me as I stand before them in a suit do the same to a man next to me dressed similarly? Somehow I doubt it.

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û €?E%|.M!w 0ZXbQFroG]

¸üÈÃÈË¿ÉÄÕµÄÊÇ£¬ÓÐЩÕâô³ÆºôÎÒµÄÈË»¹ºÜÄêÇᣬÎÒ¹»µ±ËûÃǵÄÂèÂèÁË¡ª¡ªÈç¹ûÎÒÔçµãÉúÁ˺¢×ӵϰ¡£ÎÒÃ÷°×ÕâЩÈËÊÔͼ±íÏÖµÃÇ×ÇлòÊDZíʾ¶ÔÄãµÄÈÈÇ飬µ«ÊÇÕâЩÊÛ»õÔ±Èç´Ë³ÆºôÕ¾ÔÚËýÃÇÃæÇ°Î÷×°¸ïÂĵÄÎÒ£¬ËýÃÇÒ²»á¶ÔÎÒÅÔ±ßͬÑùÎ÷×°¸ïÂĵÄÄÐÈËÒ²ÕâÑù³ÆºôÂð£¿ÎÒÓе㻳ÒÉ¡£[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û € L+2FI_4K!=$sQRGFroG]

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û &{AUDqnyqQ1ibkm+\FroG]

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û [7E Ph,IF}3nFroG]

Is it a generational thing? Or a cultural disconnect? One colleague says she doesn't mind at all being called "sweetie" because it makes her feel young.

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û q?7ELW.;ucQ!-mzFroG]

ÊÇÒòΪÄê´ú²»Í¬ÁËÂ𣿻¹ÊÇÎÄ»¯²îÒ죿ÎÒµÄÒ»¸öͬÊÂ˵£¬ËýÒ»µãÒ²²»ÔÚÒâÓÐÈ˽ÐËý¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±£¬ÒòΪÕâÈÃËý¸Ð¾õ×Ô¼ººÜÄêÇá¡£

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û 4-2*!93V4[a3QdA.FroG]

I guess I'm of the Jane Austen school of social conduct that believes "sir" and "ma'am," "please" and "pardon me" are proper forms of address in daily discourse. I say "excuse me, ma'am" or "sir, could you please..." when I have a question or need assistance. Perhaps I exaggerate, but I do sometimes worry that the increasing erosion of good manners I see every day or read about could spell the end of a civilized society.

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û jA6!\6J2L?\=0/eFroG]

ÎÒ²ÂÎÒÔÚÉç½»ÐÐΪ׼ÔòÉÏÊôÓÚ¼ò¡¤°Â˹͡ÅÉ£¬ÈÏΪ¡°ÏÈÉú¡±ºÍ¡°Å®Ê¿¡±£¬¡°Ç롱ºÍ¡°¶Ô²»Æð¡±ÊÇÈÕ³£½»Á÷ÖÐÊÊÒ˵Ä˵·¨¡£ÎÒ»áÔÚÓÐÎÊÌâ»òÐèÒª°ïÖúʱ˵¡°¶Ô²»Æð£¬Å®Ê¿¡±»ò¡°ÏÈÉú£¬ÄúÄÜ¡­¡­¡±¡£»òÐíÎÒ¿ä´óÆä´ÊÁË£¬²»¹ýÎÒÓÐÊ±ÕæµÄµ£ÐÄ£¬ÎÒÿÌì¿´µ½µÄ»òÊǶÁµ½µÄÀñò¾ÙÖ¹µÄÈÕÒæË¥°Ü¿ÉÄÜԤʾ×ÅÎÄÃ÷Éç»áµÄÖսᡣ

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û VjI5P{Dd%m#YG0v^FroG]

A New York Times article last year detailed how being called "sweetie" or "dear" chips away at the dignity of older people. "Professionals call it elderspeak, the sweetly belittling form of address that has always rankled older people," the article says. The piece refers to studies showing "that the insults can have health consequences, especially if people mutely accept the attitudes behind them."

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û Nzr {/wn;u;€+j"/!FroG]

È¥Ä꡶ŦԼʱ±¨¡·ÉϵÄһƪÎÄÕÂÏêϸ½²ÊöÁ˶ÔÄ곤µÄÈËÀ´Ëµ£¬±»³ÆÎª¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±ÓÐËðËûÃǵÄ×ðÑÏ¡£ÎÄÕÂÖÐ˵£¬ÕâÖÖÌðÃÛµ«´øÓбáµÍÉ«²ÊµÄ³ÆºôÐÎʽ×Ü»áÈÃÄ곤µÄÈ˸е½ÄÕÅ­¡£ÎÄÕÂÒýÊöÁËÑо¿½á¹û£¬ËµÕâÖÖÎêÈèÐԳƺôÄÜ´øÀ´½¡¿µÎÊÌâ£¬ÌØ±ðÊÇÈç¹ûÈËÃÇĬĬµØ½ÓÊÜÁ˳ƺô±³ºóµÄ̬¶Èʱ¡£

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û Y~BsQ"oH `9?/FroG]

On several occasions, I speak up, asking others to refrain from addressing me with undue familiarity. Just tell me yes or no or provide help or point me to the right direction--no niceties or terms of endearment necessary.

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û J}q&. F A'D-v LFroG]

ÔÚijЩ³¡ºÏ£¬ÎÒ»á´óÉù˵³öÀ´£¬Çë±ðÈ˲»ÒªÓùýÓÚÊìïþµÄ³ÆºôÀ´½ÐÎÒ¡£¸É´àµã£¬¸æËßÎÒ¡°ÊÇ¡±»¹ÊÇ¡°·ñ¡±£¬Ìṩ°ïÖú»ò¸øÎÒָ·£¬²»ÐèÒªÇ×Çеijƺô»òÊDZíʾϲ°®µÄ´Ê»ã¡£

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û {p%~c^ cHr_+e=u6kFroG]

Readers, what's your take on this? Do you mind being "sweetie-d" by strangers? Have you used these terms yourselves to casually address people you don't know?

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û =l g 7Y*!36FroG]

ÅóÓÑÃÇ£¬Äã¶Ô´ËÓкο´·¨£¿ÄãÔÚÒⱻİÉúÈ˳ÆÎª¡°Ç×°®µÄ¡±Âð£¿Äã×Ô¼ºÓÃÕâÑùµÄ´Ê³Æºô¹ýİÉúÈËÂð£¿

[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û ;zkD",| qRC,XX!fK8FroG]

 [ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û yH\X2P-LFlu=:[bhY(FroG]


ÎÄÕ¼È룺maisie    ÔðÈα༭£ºmaisie 
¡¡¡¡ÍøÓÑÆÀÂÛ£º£¨Äú¿ÉÒÔͨ¹ýÁôÑÔ²ÎÓëÎÒÃǵĻ¡£ÆÀÂÛÄÚÈÝÖ»´ú±íÍøÓѹ۵㣬Óë±¾Õ¾Á¢³¡Î޹أ¡£©
 
  ±¾Õ¾³ÏÕ÷ÓÑÇéÎÄ×ÖÁ´½Ó½»»»£¡ÇëÁªÏµmail£ºready@foxmail.com £» QQ£º13338888  
ÌìÈʱ¨Òµ¼¯ÍÅÍøÕ¾  Ó¢Ó︨µ¼±¨  ¡¶¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û¡·ÔÓÖ¾  ÓïÎÄѧϰ±¨  Êýѧ¸¨µ¼±¨  ËØÖʽÌÓý±¨  IATEFLCHINA  ËÄλһÌå½ÌÓý½ÌÑ§Íø  
 
 

 

Copyright 2007 - 2010 ¡¶¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û¡·ÔÓÖ¾Éç. All Rights Reserved

 

ÌìÈʱ¨Òµ¼¯ÍÅ °æÈ¨ËùÓÐ