Resol ,
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

That's all I still use nowadays, I thought the others fell out of use.

dependencyinjection ,

De nada.

Melatonin OP ,

El gusto es mío

fruitycoder ,

It depends on how I feel. 90% of the time I don't want sone one to feel obligated so no problem is my response. When its truely a favor I am helping with its your welcome. When i would have done it for my own sake I want to say "my pleasure" but mostly say "of course!".

mukt ,
@mukt@lemmy.ml avatar

Am I the only one who remembers "My pleasure" ?

Ultragigagigantic ,
@Ultragigagigantic@lemmy.world avatar

I can say "You're welcome"... for money!

nutsack ,

why don't we add more useless sayings to this throaway conversation script?

thank you
you're welcome
thank you for welcoming me
you're thanked as well
welcome to my house
allow me to vacuum your dick

Donebrach ,
@Donebrach@lemmy.world avatar

You’re welcome to use language however you want, regardless of what the algorithm decides.

highalectical ,
@highalectical@lemmygrad.ml avatar

"You're welcome" sounds condescending.

trslim ,

I just say, "Uh-huh!" Or "Yeah!" Like an idiot.

halferect ,

You're welcome comes off as passive aggressive. I was forced for years to say you're welcome when I never really meant it, but when I say no problem or no worries I actually mean it so I still use you're welcome but I might as well be saying go fuck yourself

Black_Gulaman ,
@Black_Gulaman@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

i use it sarcastically in normal conversations with friends

i use it seriously when replying to my bosses in a corporate environment.

Pandantic ,
@Pandantic@midwest.social avatar

Hey do you guys know what “you’re welcome” is in Spanish? “De Nada” which means “of nothing”. Sounds almost like, “no problem”.

This phrase isn’t new, either. It’s been around for centuries, just like the first instances of “you’re welcome”.

Alice ,

I use "you're welcome" in customer service, but nowhere else. It somehow always just sounds stilted and clumsy, even though it's something everyone else has said fine for years.

Otherwise I usually just say "of course", because I feel like it's the same sentiment but rolls off the tongue easier.

Dippy ,
@Dippy@beehaw.org avatar

Language changes over time, and that's the new etiquette. Though No Problem tends to feel less compulsory to me and so I feel more genuine saying it. Enjoy the world as it changes, because it'll change just as much if you don't enjoy it

dandroid ,

I think "you're welcome" is just too formal. I would say it to a customer, not my friend.

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