How To Successfully Respond To A Question You Really Don’t Want To Answer
- Make Sure You Understand The Question.
- Take Time To Respond.
- Answer Part Of The Question.
- Postpone Your Answer.
- Turn Around the Pronouns.
- Divert The Question.
- Give The Asker Some Control.
- Watch Your Tone.
What is answer or reply?
an answer is something said, written, or done in return; a reply is an answer that satisfies a detail in a question. 2. reply is generally used when the answer is understood to be verbal – either written or oral; response, by contrast, has a more general application and may be used for a variety of reactions.
How do you reply and use answer?
Definition
- Answer is a thing written or said in reaction to a question or situation.
- Reply is a response to a written or verbal statement.
- Answer can be a solution to a situation.
- Reply does not refer to a solution to a situation.
- Answer solves the question.
- Reply does not solve the question.
What to reply to Who is this?
“Who is this?” is asking you to identify this person. “This” is a pointer word: you say it while pointing to a person. The normal reply is “This is Judy” or “This is my mother”, not “It is”.
When do you use both answer and reply?
It is clear that both answer and reply can be used in formal situations where a question has been asked. If a person A asks another person B the way to the railway station and B says that he is sorry as he does not know, B’s response is actually a reply and not an answer.
What’s the proper way to respond to the question how are You?
Fine, thanks. This answer is formal. You might answer this way if someone you don’t know, like a waiter at a restaurant, asks how you are. Very well, thanks. A person who likes to be grammatically proper might answer this way. Technically, the question “How…?” should be answered with an adverb.
How to respond to the person who answered my question-Quora?
Let the answerer have the last word in his/her answer’s comment thread — especially if you’re a third party (that is, another commenter and not the question asker). It’s his/her answer, after all. If you are indeed a third party, pick up the issues in that answer in your own answer and make your case for your view.
How to respond to ” how are you ” and ” what’s up “?
This question means the same thing as “What’s up” and can be answered in the same way. One other thing that you should know: all of these questions can also be used to mean “Hello”. In that case, you don’t have to answer. It would be more natural to respond with another greeting: A: How are you? B: Hey, how’s it going?