Damus
Cecil · 137w
eh, far from the worst possible response though I know some people consider it a sort of dismissal. I see it more as a way of saying no thanks are necessary, it's an attempt at humility.
jennifer dupont 🌸 · 137w
Heard. It’s like a game of “last word” Let’s table this for now and circle back when we have more bandwidth 🤢
Sedj · 137w
As someone who often replies with "no problem" or "no worries", I see how this is behavior that could use evaluation and future modification. I don't think "you're welcome" would ever become my default response. I'm liking the idea of "anytime". What is your recommendation?
Bitkini · 137w
https://www.upworthy.com/amp/a-scorching-hot-take-on-why-younger-people-say-no-problem-instead-of-you-re-welcome-rp-2637239169
awayslice · 137w
i think “no problemo” works a little better. being a potential spanish speaker takes the “woke” edge off and makes you look worldly without being pretentious.
Cameri🐦‍🔥 · 137w
Don’t mention it
O Desenvolvedor Libertário · 137w
Melhor que "de nada"
atyh · 137w
get back to work.
j3s7m4n · 137w
https://nostr.build/i/f24906e0eb579e839cf327b79663b6a6d348f60bd420526bfa5ea9a0b9ad72b5.gif
nobody · 137w
No problem is simply the English “de nada.” It’s not implying a problem could have existed, it’s saying the exact opposite - we don’t feel like we did anything extra for you. Similarly, the Japanese have a cultural tendency to downplay the gifts they give. The recipient is worth more th...
Andy · 137w
Can we assess this discussion as a chronically online debate? Would it ever come up in conversation for those who touch grass?
annica · 137w
Are you ok with, my pleasure or are you a welcome maximalist?
freakazoid · 137w
it's *almost* non sense... only if you live outside a country which official language is English => BTW you're welcome my dude
BK · 137w
Couldn't disagree more. "No problem" means that there is no need for thanks in a scenario in which we need be nothing more than a human to care for each other when it means no disruption to us anyhow. Figure that out.
Chiefmonkey · 137w
You should reply “No no, thank you”
Dr.Ortho · 137w
Hmmmm…right! Never considered.
Unicorn㊙Whisperer · 137w
maybe a whisk of a hand gesture would do, or I'd say, "my pleasure" with a smile or if I meant it more than what it looked like, I'd say "pleasure is all mine"
a_priori · 137w
Who is the best bait poster on Nostr and why is it fiatjaf?
Ubuntu · 137w
😂😉
Chancellor · 137w
English is weird language
sidewaysram · 137w
Makes perfect sense. Its a shortened/slang version of “not a problem” which is an appropriate response.
Reichard Könige · 137w
no problemo dude
Josua Schmid · 137w
I‘m not fluent enough in english to judge that. But in german we say: „bitte“ or „gern“ as well. It‘s conversational grease and depending on the situation it could be considered rude if nothing follows a „danke“.
plebeian · 137w
You’re welcome
Freakoverse · 137w
A pleasure.
freed0m · 137w
In IRL conversations it's polite, in online messaging scenarios I'd agree that less is more it's not as bad as the hanging "hello" in an IM situation though Just get to the point!
Tom · 137w
The standard English response, now almost defunct, was “not at all.”
roya ୨୧ · 137w
what do you prefer to answer with?
Shawn · 137w
Correct. No worries is far superior.
Suhail · 137w
🤙 is always better
Stuart Bowman · 137w
De nada?
Sikto · 137w
What about “no worries” ?
oldkeyprince · 137w
Never really thought about it, but yeah…makes sense National Etiquette Expert, Author… When you respond to a person who says “thank you” for holding the door, a remark as innocent as “no worries” or “no problem” implies you aren't bothered. The reality is that two simple words, “...
Newton · 137w
I share your feeling, it's really bizarre, but "shitty and nonsensical" are heavyweight words for that. 🥰