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no thanks?

dari Dakila_Sidhi, 19 Mei 2014

Pesan: 12

Bahasa: English

Dakila_Sidhi (Tunjukkan profil) 19 Mei 2014 17.02.31

How to say "no thanks" or "thanks anyway" in Esperanto?

erinja (Tunjukkan profil) 19 Mei 2014 17.43.54

Ne dankon.

Dankon, ĉiukaze.

yyaann (Tunjukkan profil) 19 Mei 2014 17.52.08

In addition to "Dankon ĉiukaze" how would the following work?
- Tamen, dankon.
- Ĉiamaniere, dankon.
- Ĉiel, dankon.
- Dankon malgraǔe. (I feel this last one could be seen as somewhat sarcastic. What do you guys think?)

noelekim (Tunjukkan profil) 20 Mei 2014 03.59.23

Dakila_Sidhi:How to say "no thanks" or "thanks anyway" in Esperanto?
"no thanks" is simply "ne, dankon":

" ... pasigu al mi la rafanojn, mi petas. Mi ne povas pli atendi.

Vi ne prenas iom da ili ?

Ne, dankon; mi preferas la olivojn."

John Charles O'Connor. Esperanto: The Student's Complete Text Book, 1903, p.93 - goo.gl/PPnl7Y

For "thanks anyway" "tamen, dankon" is good. See Felix Woolf. English phrases and expressions in Esperanto, 1982, p.104 - goo.gl/jjXs3v

erinja (Tunjukkan profil) 20 Mei 2014 04.11.55

"Tamen, dankon" sounds fine. Your other three variants sound strange to me.

Ĉiel dankon would actually mean, I am thanking you in every possible way. Sounds like a great thanks!

yyaann (Tunjukkan profil) 20 Mei 2014 09.00.35

erinja:"Tamen, dankon" sounds fine. Your other three variants sound strange to me.
Yes, I think this one is easiest to understand, even to someone with little exposure to Esperanto, so it's most in line with the speaking style I'm trying to acquire.

erinja:Ĉiel dankon would actually mean, I am thanking you in every possible way. Sounds like a great thanks!
Haha, I didn't see it this way, but that makes sense. I've heard some Esperantists (mostly Spaniards) saying "ĉiel" in the sense of "anyway" so that's why I was tempted to say this.

I'm still interested in knowing how "Dankon malgraǔe" would be understood? It almost gives me the feeling that someone did something unhelpful while trying to help you and you're thanking them despite their actually being a bit of a nuisance.

erinja (Tunjukkan profil) 20 Mei 2014 13.46.23

malgrauxe isn't a word I usually see. But "dankon malgrauxe" does sound a little rude to me.

If I was desperate to use "malgraux" I'd use "dankon malgraux cxio", for example, but it still sounds strange to me. That would sound like they tried hard to help but it just didn't work out.

yyaann (Tunjukkan profil) 20 Mei 2014 16.35.00

erinja:
If I was desperate to use "malgraux" I'd use "dankon malgraux cxio", for example, but it still sounds strange to me. That would sound like they tried hard to help but it just didn't work out.
I see. Thanks! Well that's one of the contexts where "merci quand même" would be used in French. So I guess "thanks anyway" and "merci quand même" don't completely overlap in meaning.

Duko (Tunjukkan profil) 21 Mei 2014 15.09.40

The German language has "danke trotzdem" = "dankon malgrauxe" for thanking someone who tried to help you but couldn't. Usually followssomething like "I'm sorry I couldn't help you", and AFAIK is not rude, but just a polite way to thank someone for the effort.

yyaann (Tunjukkan profil) 21 Mei 2014 18.09.22

Duko:The German language has "danke trotzdem" = "dankon malgrauxe" for thanking someone who tried to help you but couldn't. Usually followssomething like "I'm sorry I couldn't help you", and AFAIK is not rude, but just a polite way to thank someone for the effort.
Interesting. So if I say "Dankon malgraǔe", I'm probably more likely to be understood by speakers of German or other languages that share the concept of "danke trotzdem". Thanks.

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