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> the first use is most certainly not an archaism in North American English

I understand your point and applaud your literacy. However, it's not a verb in common usage, and if our friend is using the verb to intimate in North American business English in any sense, I would advise him that the term is an archaism.

We can discuss at further leisure whether any given literary usage has at least one foot in the crypt of liberal education. ^_^

OED shows that the Indian English usage that we are discussing definitely comes from prior British English acceptations.

> which nicely keeps "intimate details" from sounding too much like "mating". :-)

OED also offers "one who intimates" to be an "intimater". (o;




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