• @Agent641@lemmy.world
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      157 days ago

      Brits ofen say “You alright?” As a substitute for “Hi.”

      Pretty jarring when you’re not used to it. Id think “God, I must look like shit if they’re genuinely checking on my welfare!”

      • Captain Aggravated
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        87 days ago

        Yeah Tom Scott did one of his linguistics videos about that, he had a word for it but some questions aren’t really questions they’re basically just rituals, though rephrased a different way makes them genuine questions, and when you have major dialects of the “same” language like British and American English, we use different ones. “Are you alright?” is basically a noise of greeting in Britain and an expression of genuine concern in America, while “How are you?” is the reverse.

        • Chinese version 你吃了吗 or variations on that, although it’s not used so much anymore. Literally means “have you eaten”, except it doesn’t really require an answer. I imagine it came up in that video, but it’s a good one.

          • @batmaniam@lemmy.world
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            56 days ago

            Literally means “have you eaten”, except it doesn’t really require an answer.

            Grandmothers in every culture

      • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        26 days ago

        When I moved to London, I remember the old lady at the laundromat addressing me as “love”

        I was like: “Damn, over here my charm even works with old ladies”

        As it turns out, calling somebody “love” it’s just a way of addressing people in some English regions.

    • @Thteven@lemmy.world
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      97 days ago

      Won’t stop us from having a conversation or even just bitching about something that is randomly bothering us.

        • @Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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          46 days ago

          It me!

          Which is also probably why I give this answer. Because it irks me to some degree that we just throwaway important questions like another human’s well-being.
          If someone responds without being tripped up, I sorta know they’re my kind of person.

          • @shneancy@lemmy.world
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            26 days ago

            oh same haha, if someone asks me a question they’re getting the answer, i don’t care that they expected a “i’m fine”

            • @Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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              26 days ago

              I just realized that I contradicted myself. I said that I use this with folks I don’t like, and then that when I use it, if someone responds well, that I know they’re my kinda people.

              I don’t exclusively use it with folks I don’t like! I also throw it out playfully. It’s validating when folks respond in-kind.

    • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      It’s really like that everywhere, in my experience.

      It’s at most small talk, not a license to dive into one’s life story.

  • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    In the opposite direction, when I moved to England it took me a while to get used to compliment “inflation” over there.

    For example when somebody’s opinion on something is:

    • “interesting”, it means it’s shit
    • “ok”, means it’s bad or mediocre
    • “good” and “great”, means it’s average
    • “wonderful” and “amazing”, means it’s good

    I once asked one of the natives how did they transmit the message that they trully believes something was a 10/10 and was explained that’s done by going into details on how something is so great.

    • @Zwiebel@feddit.org
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      3 days ago

      Meanwhile Germany:

      • “interesting” means it’s shit
      • “it goes” means it’s bad or mediocre
      • “ok” means it’s average
      • “can’t complain” means it’s fairly good
      • “very good” means it’s great
      • “really not bad” means surprisingly great
  • @redprog@feddit.de
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    117 days ago

    I’m German and for me, “can’t complain” means I have nothing to complain, I’m fine, nothing special

    • @Classy@sh.itjust.works
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      77 days ago

      I find Germans have an easier time replying to things very frankly and without garnishment or humor. I can ask a German, “How are you?”, and he may reply with “I’m fine” and it can be taken at face value.

      Americans tend to be more, I don’t know, conflict avoidant in their replies? There’s more expectation of subtext, of irony, and it’s not as typical to take “I’m fine” at face value.

      “Can’t complain” is another good one. It’s often heard as, “I can’t complain [because nobody would listen anyway]”. Tone is important, as is environmental context. Blue collar workers at the site say this, yeah their day is going to shit. Your buddy says it over drinks, maybe he’s having a neutral, normal time of life, or maybe his life is going to shit and he’s giving the ironic answer to avoid diving into his real issues, while still communicating that things are not perfect.

      Last week I was asked how my day was. It had been a perfectly normal, decent day, good time at work, beautiful weather, and my reply was “Life’s a peach”. I got back, “That bad, huh?” Yeah, the American habit of taking genuine expression and searching for a darkness under it can be tiring sometimes.

  • @Thrashy@lemmy.world
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    97 days ago

    My high-school friend group adopted “it goes” from our French class (“Comment ça va?” “Ça va!”, roughly meaning “How goes it?” “It goes!” being the common neutral greeting taught in French classes) and I slightly resent it being described negatively here.

    • Funkytom467
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      37 days ago

      Even better is, we casually drop the “Comment” and add the accent of a question instead, so it can go like : “Ça va?” “Ça va.”

      Note that in French we can make the meaning of it vary from roughly ‘not great’ to ‘good’ just by how enthusiastic we are. It’s really only when we want to express radical emotions that we might stop using it.

      (Although someone depressed might not want to express their distress and use it like the expressions in this meme…)

  • @Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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    77 days ago

    I often respond with: “Well, I’m still kicking and screaming.” I don’t know why. I think it got used a lot when I was growing up - someone getting dragged kicking and screaming.
    Folks get tripped up by that.

    For me, it means that despite the fight being hopeless, I’m still trying.

  • @megabat@lemm.ee
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    7 days ago

    Fuckin a, man.

    So far, so good.

    Is another of my favorite responses to “how’s it going”

  • @MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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    56 days ago

    One time I was in a really run-down thrift store looking for anything neat that stood out. A random guy asked how I was doing and y’know, I tried to be genuine enough, but in return he gave what is now one of my favorite replies:

    “Too blessed t’be stressed!”

    The delivery of it was like he actually meant it. Like he was just enjoying his day lookin’ at stuff and nothing could bother him.

    It’s a good outlook, y’know… especially because at the time I was in a miserable job and often used the “Been better” and “I’m here.” Responses because I just didn’t have much else in me.

    • @AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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      26 days ago

      I love stories like this because it makes me reflect on random people I’ve seen who have stuck in my memory for years who probably never noticed me. Makes me wonder if anyone remembers me for something random like this

  • Captain Aggravated
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    27 days ago

    You want to make them stop and process, answer it with “I can still walk, how about you?”

  • @AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    I don’t lie, so I’ll say, “well, you know…” and if they are friends, they know, if they aren’t, that’s a clue that they don’t want to.

  • Snailpope
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    987 days ago

    My foreman would always say “Love my job” in a happy tone after anything bad happened on a job site. The happier the tone, the worse it was