She was in the carrier, so most people didn't notice it but
a few women smiled at us.
Not exact matches
As an underwear - clad brass band and two dozen strippers march through the office, the camera lingers on the
woman a beat or two longer than is comfortable — a
few loose wisps of hair emerging from her patchy scalp, a fake
smile plastered across her face as she tries to prove she's a good sport.
And as I looked around the BlogHER conference room at all the
women I didn't know, I
smiled at a
few of the BlogHERs.
Although my unscientific poll of a
few female friends revealed that shots of other
women smiling at you might be a no - no.
A
woman's
smile is forced too wide in a failed attempt to feign for - profit happiness; the seductive sheen of a sprocketed filmstrip turns out to be a
few well - placed strokes of paint.
In line with Jacob Vigil's socio - relational framework of expressive behaviours (which in lay terms means that the way we express certain emotions is adaptive and motivates others to respond to us in ways which enhance our social fitness) Simine Vazire and her colleagues suggest that in
women,
smiling signals warmth, trustworthiness and enthusiasm to others, and in doing so attracts
fewer and more intimate relationships (not sure about the
fewer!)