You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
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P pearl22@troet.cafe shared this topic
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
"May your continued existence remain free of sorrow until the stroke of midnight."
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
@cmconseils Sometimes I feel like when I say « Have a nice day » that I say « Have a nice stay »… Aussies say « Have a good day ».
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
@cmconseils Such is the case with any unnecessarily specific statement.
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
@cmconseils It's just one breath at a time however we say it.
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
@cmconseils the more precise your expression is, the more ominous it'll sound. "I'd like to buy these groceries by these bills that are not counterfeit and which I have gained absolutely leagally, and then I'll go to meet my friend who is alive and whose home hasn't been robbed."
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
@cmconseils i like to leave them with a nice "die slow"
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
"Make every second count.".
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You can say "Have a nice day" without any problem, but using the phrase "enjoy the next 24 hours" can sound slightly threatening.
@cmconseils Yeah! And why is "good night" fine, but not "hope you make it till morning"??
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E elbekai@norden.social shared this topic