thanks but no thanks Idiom, Proverb
thanks a bunch
thanks very much, thanks a lot "When I deliver the groceries, she says, ""Thanks a bunch, Teddy."""
thanks a million
thanks very much, thanks a lot Thanks a million for all you've done for us. We do appreciate it.
yeah thanks
okay; it doesn't matter: "Jim: I already cleaned our room. Bill: Yeah thanks!!"
thanks to
owing to;because of由于
Thanks to your help,we succeeded.由于你的帮助,我们成功了。
thanks to|thanks
prep. 1. With the help of.
Thanks to a good teacher, John passed the examination. I finally finished washing the dishes, no thanks to you. 2. Owing to; because of.
Thanks to a sudden rain, the children came home with wet clothes.
give thanks for small blessings
give thanks for small blessings Express gratitude for a minor favor or advantage, as in
My bag didn't get on the plane but it did arrive in time—give thanks for small blessings. This expression is usually uttered when one encounters an unexpected bit of good fortune.
no thanks to
no thanks to see
thanks to.
thanks
thanks thanks to 1) thanks be given to
2) on account of; because of
thanks, but no thanks
An announcement of acknowledgment for the action of article that one does not appetite or is not absorbed in. Often acclimated sarcastically or impolitely. A: "Would you like to appear to the concert with me?" B: "Um, thanks, but no thanks. That bandage isn't absolutely my scene." A: "I was activity to bandy out this jacket. Do you appetite it?" B: "Yeah, thanks, but no thanks. I wouldn't be bent asleep in that animal thing."Learn more: but, no, thanksthanks but no thanks
It’s nice of you/them to offer, but I/we don’t appetite it. This phrase, dating from the backward 1900s, may be put either actively or ironically. The above acceptance appeared in the New York Times on the op-ed folio on December 5, 1997: “Paul R. Gross appropriately laments the ‘thanks but no thanks’ attitude of the California commission.” The closing attitude is apparent in, “She offered to barter seats at the opera, chastening actuality in the aftermost row at the top of the balcony—thanks but no thanks!” Learn more: but, no, thanks