In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to how hosts once tactfully communicated event end ...
Breaking up has always been messy, but Gen Z has found a new way to end things that's leaving experts—and exes—totally ...
Long before it became the beige wallpaper of modern communication, “I hope this finds you well” was a standard part of letter-writing conventions. One Civil War soldier, for example, began a letter ...
It is currently more polite to say “No problem” or “No worries,” which imply that whatever was done, the doer was happy to do ...
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to reader claiming traditional phrase now implies ...
Introverts aren't being dramatic—they're experiencing a genuine neurological difference in how they process social interaction. Research has shown that introverts have a more sensitive response to ...
Long before it became the beige wallpaper of modern communication, “I hope this finds you well” was a standard part of letter ...
It is currently more polite to say “No problem” or “No worries,” which imply that whatever was done, the doer was happy to do ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: I regret to tell you that, in the modern parlance, “You’re welcome” isn’t polite. It is currently more ...
Miss Manners has defended “No problem” and “No worries” from those who find them offensive, claiming that they suggest that a ...
Office politics can be exhausting, especially when you can't say what you really mean. These 11 passive-aggressive clapbacks ...
Reader claims replying with that phrase is a "means to communicate that the recipient better be thankful, because the situation was an imposition." But is it?