I'm a staunch "You're welcome" man, myself.
"No problem" is perceived as a millennial scourge in the workplace, jmco.
Sluts. Tons of sluts.
Not like you'd do anything with them anyway. You disgust me, Chad Wilson.
No problem showed up in the 80's and almost coincides with millennials, per some book.You're welcome is fine. Nothing at all wrong with it. I use it quite a bit for work purposes. I never realized "No problem" was a millennial thing, as I've used it, and others our age have used it, for several decades.
-Any Bahamian sluts rolling through this fall?
I feel like I say "sounds good" a lot in reply to something I agree with. I hate replying with "ok"Getting a little tired of responding with "No problem". Think I need to expand. Testing out "No worries" the last couple weeks, and seems to feel okay. Would work much better if I was Australian though and could tack on a "mate" at the end.
Pete's Sneaky
Outside Inn Again
Friends & Co.
-Hyman
I can't listen to people answer questions anymore without waiting for the responder to begin with, "Well..."
You can say whatever you want to me, just don't "Cheers" me in an email closing greeting.
Easy money.Made a $100 bet with a guy at work that UofL won't crack the Top 10 in basketball next season (including postseason).
We'll see.
"You're welcome" is the proper response to "Thank you".
"No problem" / "no worries" are the proper responses when someone says "I'm sorry" or "Excuse me".
IMLEHO, where Millenials go wrong is saying "No problem" in response to "Thank you".