Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for politesse. Search instead for politbetrieb.
Definitions

politesse

[pol-i-tes, paw-lee-tes] / ˌpɒl ɪˈtɛs, pɔ liˈtɛs /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In conversation, Lysette has an accentuate-the-positive outlook — remnants of a Midwestern politesse, perhaps — that she admitted to using to find good in even the darkest memories.

From New York Times

She’s not so much a train wreck as the train that wrecks the stasis of smothering politesse; the best woman for the job.

From New York Times

Barriers of language and resentment are difficult to surmount, especially when the acquaintance Freddie totes along to interpret pads their conversation with anxious politesse, making a frank talk frankly impossible.

From New York Times

The Broadway veteran Carolee Carmello thus creates the character of the Pennsylvania holdout John Dickinson mostly by holding back on the outrage and offering smiles and politesse in its place.

From New York Times

More than politesse, Brazil needs structural reform, integrity, respect for fiscal red lines and a political class that plays by the rule of law.

From Washington Post