10 Ways to Say Thank You in English How to Thank People and Respond

Hi, I’m Justin.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn how to thank
people in English.

You’ll learn different ways to say thank
you in formal, neutral, or informal situations.

You’ll also see how to make sure you sound
polite and natural when you thank someone,

or respond to a thank-you.

Ready?

Let’s get going!

I just wanted to say thank you for all your
hard work on this project.

I really appreciate the contribution you’ve
made.

Oh, well, that’s nice of you; thank you
for saying so!

Thank you very much for the invitation.

It was our pleasure, and thank you for coming.

I’m very grateful for all your help.

Oh, don’t worry about it; it was nothing!

Here, you saw different ways to thank someone
in formal situations.

Can you remember any of the phrases you heard?

In a formal situation, you could say:

I just wanted to say thank you for
Thank you very much for…

I really appreciate…

I’m very grateful for…

After for, you can use a noun, or an -ing
verb, like this:

I just wanted to say thank you for your help.

Or: I just wanted to say thank you for helping
us.

After appreciate, you can use a noun, or that
plus a clause.

For example:

I really appreciate your support.

Or: I really appreciate that you made such
an effort to support me.

When someone thanks you, you need to respond.

The most basic way is to say You’re welcome.

But, what can you do in a more formal situation?

In a truly formal situation, the most common
way to respond is to thank the other person

for something else.

For example, in one of the dialogues, you
heard one person say:

Thank you very much for the invitation.

The other person replied:

It was our pleasure, and thank you for coming.

You can use phrases like you’re welcome
or it’s my pleasure in formal situations,

but it’s also good to add a second thank-you.

Alternatively, you could say something like
this:

Oh, don’t worry about it; it was nothing!

What do you think this shows?

Saying something like this is a way to say,
“Stop being so serious and formal.”

It shows that the other person doesn’t need
to thank you in a very formal way.

This is an important point: remember that
formal language is not always more polite.

Formal language can sound cold or distant
if you use it in the wrong situation.

You might need formal thank-yous in some companies
or work situations, although many companies

have a more relaxed personal culture these
days.

You might also use them in some social situations,
for example a wedding or party where you don’t

know the people very well.

Most of the time, you’ll need to use neutral
thank-you phrases.

Let’s look!

Here’s your camera.

Thanks for letting me borrow it!

No problem!

Excuse me, where’s the entrance to the metro?

It’s right there, just over the street.

Thank you!

You’re welcome!

How’d you enjoy the food?

It was great!

Thanks!

My pleasure!

Let’s start with a question: what does ‘neutral’
mean?

‘Neutral’ describes language which is
neither formal nor informal.

Neutral language is the simple language which
you can use in almost any situation.

In the dialogues, you heard three ways to
thank someone using neutral language, and

three responses you can use when someone thanks
you.

Do you remember the phrases you heard?

To thank someone using neutral language, you
could say:

Thanks for…

Thank you!

Or, thanks!

To respond, you could say:

No problem!

You’re welcome!

Or, my pleasure!

Easy, right?

Neutral language is the most common form.

You can also see that in neutral situations,
the interactions are much shorter.

In formal situations, you need to speak more.

For example:

I just wanted to say thank you for letting
me use your camera.

It was a great help to me.

This is formal, and you can see that it’s
quite long.

In a neutral situation, you can just say:

Thanks for letting me borrow your camera!

It’s much shorter and simpler.

Next, what about informal situations?

Your coffee’s ready.

I put it on the table.

(mmm hmm)

I got you a chocolate bar.

Oh, thanks.

Did you get a haircut?

Looks good!

You can see that in informal situations, you
often might not say thank you at all!

You use informal language with people you
know well.

In these situations, you often don’t need
to be traditionally polite.

So, you might say thank you another way, by
making a noise, smiling, nodding, or something

like that.

You can use thanks in informal situations.

In British English, you can say cheers.

In informal situations, you often don’t
respond to a thank-you, so you don’t use

phrases like you’re welcome or my pleasure.

Of course, this depends on the situation and
the people.

If you’re not sure, then use neutral language:
say thanks or thank you.

Now, you’ve seen how to thank people in
English in formal, neutral and informal situations.

It’s important to get the tone right, but
there’s another point which is important

when you thank someone in spoken English.

Can you guess what I mean?

I bought you a present.

Thank you so much!

I bought you a present.

Thank you so much!

I bought you a present.

Thank you so much.

Of course, when you thank someone, the whole
point is to be polite.

The words and phrases you choose are important,
but your intonation is possibly even more

significant.

You saw in the dialogues that the same phrase
can have very different meanings with different

intonation.

Using polite phrases means nothing if your
tone and body language don’t match your

words.

For example:
I’m so incredibly grateful for everything

you’ve done for me and I don’t know how
I can ever thank you.

If I say that to you, you know I’m not being
polite; it doesn’t matter that I’m using

very formal language.

Similarly, if you hear:
Wow!

Thanks!

The language is more informal, but the tone
makes it sound genuine, and therefore polite.

However, sounding more excited or sincere
is not always better: if you overuse this

intonation, it can sound fake.

You need to match your language and your intonation
to the situation, and then you’ll sound

polite and natural when you thank people in
English!

Now, we want to know something: how many different
languages can you say thank you in?

Tell us in the comments, and let’s see who
knows the most different words!

Check out our website for more of our free
English lessons: Oxford Online English dot

com.

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!