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Why do some Americans say "thank" instead of "thanks" with an S at the end?
Hi,
I've noticed some Americans casually(?) say "thank" (without an S).
Is that grammatically wrong or still acceptable?
Thank you.
22 de dic. de 2017 4:30
Respuestas · 5
2
I've never heard any Americans say "thank" instead of "thanks" or "thank you."
22 de diciembre de 2017
1
I have never heard just "thank;" only "thanks" or "thank you." Perhaps a certain group of friends have started saying it with each other, or perhaps they say it as a joke?
Edit: It is also possible you may have heard someone use the word "thank" in a longer sentence. "To thank" is a verb meaning "to show gratitude." So, you might say:
"Please, thank Mr. Wilson for his hard work!"
Did you perhaps hear something like this? Let me know if you are still confused.
22 de diciembre de 2017
1
This isn't an actual offline thing. On internet message boards and blog sites (particularly tumblr) and facebook groups one often finds people (usually teenagers I might add) who say "thank" as a 'memed up' version of saying thanks. Example dialogue:
Mark says:
"Here's that link you were searching for: https://www.whateverwebsite.org."
Joan replies:
"thank"
Mark responds:
"np."
(np = no problem.)
It's a very teenagery way of speaking and I'd recommend avoiding it as a second language learner.
22 de diciembre de 2017
1
Did you see this online? Because the only usage I can think of (other than as a verb) is "Thank mr skeltal," which is a meme based on an image of a skull playing a trumpet. Someone found the image and posted it on a discussion board and said, "Thank mr skeltal," and then there was a whole thread of people saying, "Thank mr skeltal." The image became popular for absolutely no reason. Because of this, some people on social media use "thank" this way as a joke. It's intentionally grammatically incorrect.
Here's the image: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/mS2sP9ENM1M/hqdefault.jpg
The Internet can be weird.
22 de diciembre de 2017
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