Is saying got it rude?
When somebody is explaining something to you, or asking you to do something, replying to them with one of these words is a polite way to show that you are listening and can follow what they are saying. Got it. This is another way of saying “ok, I understood what you said / what you want from me!”
Are Many thanks rude?
Yes, many thanks is perfectly proper, grammatical, standard English. It is appropriate to use wherever “thanks” (as opposed to “thank you”) would be acceptable. As Martha says, many thanks is perfectly idiomatic.
Can I reply understood?
You might be used to replying “understood”, but that is about as normal to English speakers as “got it”. There’s many ways of saying that you understand an explanation, but for most of us they begin “I …” – “I understand”, “I see”, ‘I’ve got that”, “I get it”, “I see what you mean” are examples.
Did u understand or understood?
“Do you understand?” is correct. It is asking if the person understands the situation right now. “Do you understand?” Is a question about understanding in the present. “Did you understand?” is a question about understanding something (both the thing when it happened and the understanding at that time) in the past.
How does it feel to be understood?
If you feel understood, you’re not groping your way in the darkness. With others’ respectful willingness to recognize you and your intentions, you’re empowered to attempt, and accomplish, things that you otherwise might not be driven to do.
Did not understood or understand?
Either is correct: “didn’t understand you” is in the past tense, and “don’t understand you” is in the present tense. “Understood” is the past and past participle of understand, and would be used in sentences like “I hadn’t understood you”, or “It’s understood that 1+1 = 2”, or “He understood what I told him”.
Is that understood meaning?
DEFINITIONS1. 1. used for emphasizing, especially in a threatening way, that someone should do what you are telling them. No one is to leave before five.
What does it mean when someone says Understood?
Understood means that you now know how to do something, or you know how something works. An example: Someone may say “can you fold your clothes like this instead in the future?” And you can respond “noted” to let them know that you will try to remember to do that in he future.
How do you use the word understood?
Understood sentence example
- The girl understood and began to clear them.
- But my teacher had been with me several weeks before I understood that everything has a name.
- He stood at the back, and, though he had heard hardly anything, understood everything in his own way.
- “I understood ,” he replied with a smile.
Is understood past present or future?
Understand verb forms
| Infinitive | Present Participle | Past Tense |
|---|---|---|
| understand | understanding | understood |
Is forget past or present?
make verb forms
| Infinitive | Present Participle | Past Tense |
|---|---|---|
| forget | forgetting | forgot or ( archaic ) forgat |
Is Wrote past tense?
Verb Tenses
| past | present | |
|---|---|---|
| simple | He wrote | He writes |
| continuous | He was writing | He is writing |
| perfect | He had written | He has written |
| perfect continuous | He had been writing | He has been writing |
What is the v3 of forget?
The past tense of forget is forgot (archaic) or forgat (obsolete). The third-person singular simple present indicative form of forget is forgets. The present participle of forget is forgetting. The past participle of forget is forgotten or forgot (archaic).
What does I have forgotten mean?
Idiomatically they mean basically the same. The difference is in the tense. The first is the simple past, it means that at some point in the past you forgot it. The second is present perfect, which means that you forgot in the past and are continuing to have forgotten up to now.
What is the third form of get?
get/got/gotten. Get is the present tense form of the verb. Got is the past tense form as well as one of the two alternatives for the past participle. The other alternative for the past participle is gotten, which is generally preferred in the United States.
When we use get and got?
Get is the present tense form of the verb to get. Got is the past tense form, as well the past participle in a sentence such as “We have got two tickets”.
Have got or had got?
You are right that the past of both ‘I have’ and ‘I’ve got’ is simply ‘I had’. The form ‘I have got’ – or more usually ‘I’ve got – is an informal alternative to ‘I have’ but only in the present simple tense. In all other tenses, we just use the verb ‘have’ without ‘got’.
Is have gotten correct grammar?
5 Answers. In general, “have got” is the present perfect form of “to get” in UK English, while “have gotten” is the US English version. However, even in US English, “have got” is used in certain instances, namely to mean present tense have (in the sense of possession, or to mean must): I have got a lot of friends.