Please DONT Say Youre Welcome Better Responses To THANK YOU Learn English

Today we’re going to learn 16 different responses to ‘thank you’.

Hey Siri, how often do I have to water my tomato plant?

Here’s what I found.

Thanks, Siri!

Of course!

She didn’t say ‘You’re welcome!’

For the record, ‘you’re welcome’ is still by far the most common response,

so there’s absolutely nothing wrong with using it,

but different responses do have slightly different meanings,

so let’s expand your vocabulary and knowledge of English by learning them.

We’re also going to study real world examples of people responding to ‘thank you’

so you can see how they respond and how they string together multiple responses.

There’s a lot to study today, stick with me, and as always, if you like this video

or you learned something new, please like and subscribe with notifications, it really helps.

You’re welcome.

I want to make sure you know how to pronounce this word: Are you thinking ‘you’re’?

Because that’s not how we would say that. We would say ‘yer’, you’re welcome, yer, yer, yer,

this is called a reduction, where we change the sounds and make a word shorter, quicker in spoken English.

You won’t hear someone say: You’re Welcome.

It’s always: You’re welcome, yer, yer.

Yer, yer, you’re welcome.

You can also vary this by adding a word like ‘quite’.

Quite makes it more formal for sure, and you’ll see fewer examples of this.

By the way, if you don’t know Youglish, that’s where I’m going to get all these example.

You can type in a word or phrase and it gives you a bunch of different video clips

where that example is used. So it’s a good way to not only get examples,

but see how frequent a phrase is in spoken English.

So, you’re quite welcome.

There’s also: You’re very welcome.

You might say this if someone says to you: ‘Thank you very much’.

You’re very welcome!

But you can also just say it as a response to ‘thank you’.

Thank you.

You’re very welcome.

You’re very welcome.

You might also hear: You’re so welcome. This could be a response to ‘Thank you so much’.

You’re so welcome.

Wow, we’re also learning different ways to say ‘thank you’, aren’t we?

Thank you so much.

You’re so welcome.

You’re so welcome.

I like this one.

Okay, next. You’ll also hear ‘you’re most welcome’.

This one is more formal and less common.

You’re most welcome.

I want to point out that when we have a T between two consonants,

like here, we have ST, the ending cluster of ‘most’, and then W, the ‘w’ of ‘welcome’,

so the T comes between 2 consonants.

In a case like this, most native speakers will usually drop that T.

So it will be: You’re mos—welcome.

Mos—welcome.

Not: Mostt welcome.

Most welcome.

You’re most welcome.

No T. Let’s listen to that example again, plus another one, and notice, there is no T in ‘most’.

Another thing you can instead of ‘you’re welcome’, that’s casual, is “no problem.”

This one is more casual, but you will hear it a lot.

Actually, my cousin used to work at a restaurant that was a little bit fancy,

and she said one of the rules there is that they were not allowed to respond to ‘thank you’ with ‘no problem’.

I guess the management felt it was a little too casual.

But really, in most situations, I think it’s just fine.

Thank you.

No problem!

Now, my cousin was told instead to say something more formal like,

“my pleasure” or “it’s my pleasure.”

In British English, you can even shorten it to just ‘pleasure’,

but that’s not something we do in American English.

We keep it to ‘my pleasure’.

Now, another way you can respond to ‘thank you’ is with ‘thank you’.

This shows that we enjoyed what you asked us to do.

You’ll hear it a lot in a situation like this: Someone is invited to speak somewhere or present something,

and when someone says, “thank you for coming” or “thank you for being here” or

“thank you for doing this,” that person will say, “thank you for inviting me”.

Sometimes with more emphasis on ‘you’. Thank YOU for inviting me.

Or, thank you for inviting me.

Let’s listen to an example.

So there she said, oh, thank you.

In the next one he’ll say ‘no, thank YOU.’ And he’ll really emphasize ‘you’.

But both of these phrases work great.

This is a phrase I use pretty much every day when I get an email from a student thanking me for a video,

or for my Academy, the materials there, I always say, no thank YOU.

Thank you for watching, for signing up, for putting in the time to study with me.

You’ll so hear ‘sure’. Short, quick, casual.

Thank you.

Sure.

Or you might hear: Sure thing.

Even Siri knows ‘sure thing’.

Thanks Siri.

Sure thing.

Sure thing! She didn’t say: You’re welcome!

Of course.

‘Of course’ by itself means obvious, expected.

So when someone says ‘of course’ instead of ‘you’re welcome’,

the feeling is “it’s obvious that I would do that because I want to do that’.

It’s friendly. It’s a friendly way to say it.

Thank you so much for helping me today.

Of course! I enjoyed it.

In this example, there is music.

One woman said “thanks again”

and the other woman replied “of course”.

No worries, or, don’t worry about it.

This one is a little strange because it seems like we’re saying the person should be worrying that

they’ve asked you to do too much,

but that’s not really what it means. It’s just a very casual ‘you’re welcome’.

So he answered with no worries, thank YOU.

He did that Thank YOU thing.

And he also gave two responses that would have worked on their own.

And that’s something that definitely happens quite a bit.

“Of course, my pleasure”, or, “Sure, you’re welcome.”

Next, don’t mention it.

It’s like saying, you don’t even have to thank me.

Which we wouldn’t actually say, but we would say don’t mention it.

This one’s not too common. I do have an example for you, but it’s a pretty old clip.

And actually, this is a response that Siri might give you.

Thanks Siri!

Don’t mention it.

Don’t mention it!

She didn’t say ‘You’re welcome!’

Thanks!

Don’t mention it.

You’ll also hear ‘anytime’. It’s like saying, I would do this for you any time, I would do it again.

Anytime. There are other ‘any’ responses, like ‘anything for you.’

Or, Anything, anytime.

That’s like saying, I will always help out.

You’ll also hear I’m happy to.

This could look like this: Thank you!

I’m happy to do it.

Or, I’m happy to be here.

This could also be: I’m happy to help.

Sometimes you’ll hear with this: It was nothing, I’m happy to help.”

So: ‘It was nothing’ could be another response.

It’s like saying, it was so easy to help.

Thank you, it was nothing.

The last one I’m going to go over today is the phrase ‘no sweat’.

This is one that’s also casual, and you know what?

It’s another one of Siri’s responses.

Thanks Siri!

No sweat.

No sweat!

Now we’re just going to look at a few examples of people responding to ‘thank you’ in real life situations.

You’ll notice that people stack responses.

Sometimes using more than one of these phrases that we’ve learned. For example:

“Thank you, it’s always a pleasure.” This kind of thing.

I hope this video has helped you understand the different responses to ‘thank you’

and how to build a good response yourself.

And remember, if you’re ever not sure, just say “you’re welcome”.

And now I want to thank you for watching this and giving me your precious study time.

I make new videos on the English language every Tuesday, be sure to subscribe.

I also run an Academy where you can train and take your English communication skills to the next level,

be sure to check it out, that’s Rachel’s English Academy.

That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

今天我们将学习 16 种对“谢谢”的不同回应。

嘿 Siri,我需要多久给我的番茄植物浇水一次?

这是我发现的。

谢谢,西里!

当然!

她没有说“不客气!”

为了记录,“不客气”仍然是迄今为止最常见的反应,

所以使用它绝对没有错,

但是不同的反应确实有稍微不同的含义,

所以 让我们通过学习来扩展您的词汇量和英语知识。

我们还将研究现实世界中人们回应“谢谢”的例子,

这样你就可以看到他们是如何回应的,以及他们如何将多个回应串联起来。

今天有很多东西要学习,坚持下去,和往常一样,如果你喜欢这个视频

或者你学到了一些新东西,请喜欢并订阅通知,它真的很有帮助。

别客气。

我想确保你知道这个词的发音:你在想“你是”吗?

因为我们不是这样说的。 我们会说‘yer’,不客气,yer, yer, yer,

这被称为减音,我们改变发音,使英语口语中的单词更短、更快。

你不会听到有人说:不客气。

它总是:不客气,你,你。

耶耶,不客气。

您也可以通过添加“相当”之类的词来改变这一点。

肯定会让它更正式,而且你会看到更少的例子。

顺便说一句,如果你不了解 Youglish,我将在这里获得所有这些示例。

您可以输入一个单词或短语,它会为您提供一堆

使用该示例的不同视频剪辑。 因此,这不仅是获取示例的好方法,还可以

查看短语在英语口语中的出现频率。

所以,你很受欢迎。

还有:不客气。

如果有人对您说:“非常感谢您”,您可能会这样说。

不客气!

但你也可以只说它作为对“谢谢”的回应。

谢谢你。

你很受欢迎。

你很受欢迎。

你可能还会听到:你真受欢迎。 这可能是对“非常感谢”的回应。

你真受欢迎。

哇,我们也在学习说“谢谢”的不同方式,不是吗?

太感谢了。

你真受欢迎。

你真受欢迎。

我喜欢这个。

好的,接下来。 您还会听到“不客气”。

这个比较正式,不太常见。

不客气。

我想指出,当我们在两个辅音之间有一个 T 时,

就像这里一样,我们有 ST,‘most’ 的结尾簇,然后是 W,‘welcome’ 的’w',

所以 T 出现在 2 个辅音之间 .

在这种情况下,大多数以母语为母语的人通常会放弃那个 T。

所以它会是:你是 mos-welcome。

莫斯——欢迎。

不:最欢迎。

最受欢迎的。

不客气。

没有 T。让我们再听一遍那个例子,加上另一个例子,注意,“most”中没有 T。

你可以做的另一件事是“没问题”,而不是“不客气”。

这个比较随意,但你会听到很多。

事实上,我表姐曾经在一家有点花哨的餐厅工作

,她说那里的一条规定是他们不能用“没问题”来回应“谢谢”。

我猜管理层觉得这有点太随意了。

但实际上,在大多数情况下,我认为这很好。

谢谢你。

没问题!

现在,我的表弟被告知要说更正式的话,比如

“我的荣幸”或“这是我的荣幸”。

在英式英语中,您甚至可以将其缩写为“愉快”,

但这不是我们在美式英语中所做的事情。

我们将其保留为“我的荣幸”。

现在,你可以用“谢谢”来回应“谢谢”的另一种方式。

这表明我们喜欢您要求我们做的事情。

在这样的情况下,你会听到很多这样的声音:有人被邀请在某个地方演讲或展示一些东西

,当有人说“谢谢你的到来”或“谢谢你来这里”或

“谢谢你这样做, ”那个人会说,“谢谢你邀请我”。

有时更强调“你”。 谢谢你邀请我。

或者,谢谢你邀请我。

让我们听一个例子。

所以她说,哦,谢谢。

在下一个中,他会说“不,谢谢你”。他会真正强调“你”。

但这两个短语都很好用。

当我收到一个学生的电子邮件时,我几乎每天都会使用这句话,感谢我的视频,

或者感谢我的学院,那里的材料,我总是说,不,谢谢。

感谢您观看,注册,花时间和我一起学习。

你会听到“确定”的声音。 简短,快速,随意。

谢谢你。

当然。

或者你可能会听到:当然。

甚至 Siri 也知道“确定的事情”。

谢谢西里。

肯定的事。

确定的事! 她没有说:不客气!

当然。

“当然”本身意味着明显的、预期的。

因此,当有人说“当然”而不是“不客气”时

,感觉是“很明显我会这样做,因为我想这样做”。

这是友好的。 这是一种友好的表达方式。

非常感谢你今天帮助我。

当然! 我很喜欢它。

在这个例子中,有音乐。

一位女士说“再次感谢”

,另一位女士回答“当然”。

不用担心,或者,不用担心。

这有点奇怪,因为我们似乎在说这个人应该担心

他们要求你做太多事情,

但这并不是真正的意思。 这只是一个非常随意的“不客气”。

所以他毫不担心地回答,谢谢。

他做了谢谢你的事。

他还给出了两个可以自行解决的回答。

这肯定会发生很多。

“当然,我的荣幸”,或者,“当然,不客气。”

接下来,不提了。

这就像说,你甚至不必感谢我。

我们实际上不会说,但我们会说不要提及它。

这个不太常见。 我确实有一个例子给你,但这是一个相当古老的剪辑。

实际上,这是 Siri 可能会给你的回应。

谢谢西里!

别提了。

别提了!

她没有说“不客气!”

谢谢!

别提了。

您还会听到“任何时候”。 这就像在说,我随时都会为你做这件事,我会再做一次。

随时。 还有其他“任何”回答,例如“任何给你的”。

或者,任何时候,任何时候。

这就像在说,我会一直提供帮助。

你也会听到我很高兴。

这可能看起来像这样:谢谢!

我很乐意这样做。

或者,我很高兴来到这里。

这也可能是:我很乐意提供帮助。

有时你会听到这样的话:没什么,我很乐意提供帮助。”

所以:“没什么”可能是另一种回应。

就像在说,这很容易提供帮助。

谢谢,没什么。

我今天要讲的最后一个是“无汗”这个短语。

这也很随意,你知道吗?

这是 Siri 的另一个回应。

谢谢西里!

没有汗水。

没有汗水!

现在我们只看一些在现实生活中回应“谢谢”的人的例子。

您会注意到人们会堆叠响应。

有时会使用不止一个我们学过的这些短语。 例如:

“谢谢,这总是一种乐趣。” 这种事。

我希望这个视频可以帮助您了解对“谢谢”的不同回应

以及如何自己建立良好的回应。

请记住,如果您不确定,只需说“不客气”。

现在我要感谢你观看这个节目并给我宝贵的学习时间。

我每周二都会制作新的英语视频,请务必订阅。

我还开办了一所学院,在那里你可以训练并把你的英语沟通技巧提升到一个新的水平,

一定要检查一下,这就是瑞秋的英语学院。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。