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Please

Please is a polite adverb used in English to accompany requests and commands, signaling courtesy and a wish to defer the listener's compliance. It can soften imperatives, help maintain social harmony, and function as a versatile discourse marker in both spoken and written language.

Etymology and development: The verb to please comes from Old French plaisier or plaisir, from Latin placere

Usage and position: Please can appear at the beginning, middle, or end of a sentence: “Please close

Pragmatic and cross-cultural notes: As a politeness strategy, please reduces directness and helps maintain face. It

“to
be
agreeable,
to
please.”
The
modern
adverb
please
emerged
in
Middle
English
as
a
courtesy
particle
and
came
to
be
used
routinely
to
phrase
requests
more
politely.
the
door,”
“Close
the
door,
please,”
or
“Could
you
close
the
door,
please?”
It
commonly
follows
modals
or
polite
forms
such
as
“could
you,”
“would
you,”
or
“might
you.”
In
writing,
its
placement
can
influence
tone
and
formality;
overuse
may
come
across
as
insistent
or
insincere
in
some
contexts.
often
coexists
with
expressions
of
gratitude,
such
as
“thank
you,”
in
sequences
of
courtesy.
Equivalents
exist
in
other
languages,
such
as
“por
favor”
in
Spanish
or
“s’il
vous
plaît”
in
French,
reflecting
a
similar
social
function
across
cultures.
In
certain
urgent
or
formal
contexts,
speakers
may
omit
please,
relying
on
tone
or
situational
norms
to
convey
politeness.