মিশুক, অমায়িক
(1) (used colloquially
(2) (used colloquially) having the relationship of friends or pals
(1) He is not pally , he is too great to be brought down to our level.
(2) It takes a while for players to get to know each other and get pally .
(3) They preferred the pally familiarity of Kelly, with her thick fringe, boxy business suits, glasses and the voice that could saw wood.
(4) He puts a pally arm around you and gives you the thumbs up when the band starts playing, saying: u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510How good is this?
(5) There's a lot of managers who are pally with the players, but he's not like that.
(6) Politicians who want to be both vile and pally earn my contempt.
(7) Into the fray steps a candidate once very pally with the incumbent Liberal Party but then opting to run on an independent ticket due to strong differences of opinion.
(8) Whatever are the reasons, the police being pally with the public surely makes for a strange spectacle!
(9) She actually seems believable when she is being very sisterly with a young coffee vendor, or when she is being pally with the lady constable.
(10) Fred, 81, said: u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510We met in Egypt and got a bit pally , we went around a bit together.u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb
(11) Nearly two in five of women in a long-term relationship were happy to dance with a stranger while nearly a third said their friends were more than happy to get pally with groups of lads.
(12) Vikram was quite pally with whoever got to meet him.
(13) The two are as pally in real life as they are in the movie.
chummy
matey
palsy-walsy