Unique way of sorry to talk to love partner, to adopt this simple idea, will be impressed in front

If you apologize to someone, it sometimes becomes difficult to find the right word, which makes the other person feel that you really apologize. But there are some linguistic techniques that you can express message effectively. Recent research suggests that the length of the words we have chosen affects how serious our excuse is. Feeling better after apologizing – Research research has shown that forgiveness is often described as ‘soft interaction’. A person says ‘sorry’ no matter what he really feels. But forgiveness also works. Research suggests that if someone apologizes, people feel better and that there is more likely to work with the excuse. One way to make forgiveness more efficient is to make it expensive. The excuse is better accepted if the person seeking forgiveness is ready to bear the cost of money, effort or time. If spent on forgiveness, people are pleased that a study conducted in 2009 found that people have more confidence in the excuse that is sought by paying money than the excuse sought without any costs. However, other methods can also be adopted to apologize. The length and appearance of a word affects how difficult it is to speak or write it. Long words require more clarity. It is difficult to remember and speak unusual words. Therefore, if someone wants to express his regret by trying more in his apology, he can use long and less common words. In addition, unusual words are difficult to understand, which means it is cumbersome for talking as well as the person who speaks. But it is usually not difficult to understand long words that are not uncommon. Choose a long word for forgiveness. This is more clear than other words, which means it can understand easier. Again, a sensible excuse can choose long words that are not rare. This makes it difficult for him to apologize, but not what apologize is apologized for. I did two research to explore the length of the Word and the role of word equality in forgiveness. One has analyzed excuses in the real world, and one tested people’s perceptions about excuses with different lengths and similarities. What was found in this research? In the first research, I used the excuse messages posted on ‘X’ (East Twitter) by 25 well -known celebrities and 25 ordinary people. These messages were compared to other tweets of the same users. My results showed that forgiveness-X messages had long words compared to non-gap domination messages. In another study, I investigated whether people considered long or less general forgiveness than more serious. The participants received three excuses sentences whose meaning was the same, but there was a difference in the length or word equality of the word. Example one: My work does not indicate who I am (short, general) my work does not reflect my true nature (short, less common) my work does not reflect my real character (long, short general). Give an example: My intention was not to respond hostile (short, general), my intention was not to answer in the aggressive style (short, low general). My intention was not to answer in a confrontation (long, short normal). Participants received three sentences in random order and they are most sorted from the least to the least excuse. The results showed that the participants regarded the sentences of high words as more apologetic than sentences with short words. Conversely, the general nature of the word did not affect how many excuse sentences were. People use long words while apologizing. The results of both research are mixed: People use long words while apologizing and viewing long words for forgiveness as more apologetic. But the excuse sought with unusual words does not have that much effect. In other words, people express their excuse in such words that are difficult for them to say or write, but it is not difficult for the person to whom forgiveness is sought. My research indicates that our messages not only convey through the meaning of words, but also through the form of words. Research also shows how the form of a word (in this case its length) can express the meaning based on the context. That is, the word ‘character’ does not generally mean excuses, but in terms of apology, the length reflects the effort and can be understood as more remorse.