Reminds me of this anecdote of a professor stating, there were no language in which a double positive can be used to express a negative. Yeah, right. :D
Hey Sarah, thanks for posting this. I was always wondering how to say that in English. Untill now I would rather say "Yeah, sure" instead of "Yeah, right". Meaning "I don't believe what someone has said". Would it be correct though?
BTW, I think you should make (shoud say make or do?) a video about Australian Open ;)
You're welcome :) "Yeah, sure" is also correct. Actually, there are many other things you can say to mean the same thing. As long as you have the right tone of voice, you'll get the message across.
Thank you for the quiz about US presidents - it's good to know such things...
AgnieszkaD1990 2 years ago
Reminds me of this anecdote of a professor stating, there were no language in which a double positive can be used to express a negative. Yeah, right. :D
Redfrettchen 3 years ago
Hey Sarah, thanks for posting this. I was always wondering how to say that in English. Untill now I would rather say "Yeah, sure" instead of "Yeah, right". Meaning "I don't believe what someone has said". Would it be correct though?
BTW, I think you should make (shoud say make or do?) a video about Australian Open ;)
All the best!
Adammythbusterspl 3 years ago
You're welcome :) "Yeah, sure" is also correct. Actually, there are many other things you can say to mean the same thing. As long as you have the right tone of voice, you'll get the message across.
thedailyenglishshow 3 years ago
lol sleepr hold
deepdeep1982 3 years ago
Yeah!
I hope Obama won't start any wars.
ethlinnintheglow 3 years ago