Please sit down.

Please sit down.

Sit down and read French, English [sit daun] and American [sit da? n]

It means: sit down.

Second, please read French, English [pli:z] and America [pliz].

As an exclamation, it means: please.

Being a verb means: please; Create happiness; Satisfied; beautiful

Phrases:

Please pay attention. Sweetheart stewardess; Flight attendant training class?

Please ring the bell. take advice

Please give it? Please give; ?

Example:

Sitting? Come down,? Please. Jean? Me? Check? Yours Neck. ?

Please sit down. Let me examine your neck.

Please use extended data:

1.please basically means "please" and refers to a polite request when asking someone to do something. It can also be used to strengthen the tone of request or wish and express "excuse me, please".

Please is often used in imperative sentences, which can be placed at the beginning, end or end of the sentence. Please is preceded by a comma.

Please, when used as a verb, means "(make) happy, (make) satisfied", which means to have a strong sense of excitement and satisfaction after the desire or interest is satisfied. It can also mean "want, like" and express a desire for something.

Please can be used as a transitive verb or an intransitive verb. When used as a transitive verb, nouns and pronouns are followed by objects.

Please can be interpreted as "please", and you can also take an infinitive as an object at this time.

6. Really? Pleased is often used to express the feelings or emotions of the subject, and it is a system table structure.

7. If you? Please have two meanings; One is a polite request, which is often used for small things and can be replaced by please; Second, it is used for irony to express the speaker's strangeness, surprise and anger. When receiving service, you can say, "Yes? Please.

Please is not used in the progressive.

9. it's not like the general ... to structure, which means negative, is it too? Pleased+to- v means positive rather than negative.

10, the past participle of pleased is often used as an adjective and predicate in sentences.