Has the meaning to the question “Do you mind” changed ?





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When a person asks "Do you mind if I ..." The response now days seems to be "Yes ..sure go ahead" which to me means they DO mind.. I hear this constantly on TV and in the work place, it just seems to bug me...










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  • This doesn't imply a change in the meaning of the question, but rather the prevalence of a misunderstanding of the basic English rules used in the phrase. "Do you mind if I do X?" still means the same as it used to ("Would you be upset if I do X"?). The answer is still "Yes, I do mind" or "No, I don't mind." People have simply shortened the response to yes or no, and affirmative answers seem to be seen as more polite, regardless of their meaning, so people just answer "yes".
    – TylerH
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:02










  • IMHO, the phrase "Do you mind if..." is inelegant and imprecise. In many (if not most) cases, the asker doesn't really want to know the internal thoughts of the respondent; he or she simply wants to know if the respondent will allow it. The question demands mental gymnastics that can complicate the conversation: What if the respondent does mind, but will allow the action anyway? What if he or she doesn't mind, but knows of some reason that the asker isn't allowed to perform the action? I would prefer to hear the phrase "May I..." when the asker merely wants permission.
    – George Cummins
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:37



















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












When a person asks "Do you mind if I ..." The response now days seems to be "Yes ..sure go ahead" which to me means they DO mind.. I hear this constantly on TV and in the work place, it just seems to bug me...










share|improve this question






















  • This doesn't imply a change in the meaning of the question, but rather the prevalence of a misunderstanding of the basic English rules used in the phrase. "Do you mind if I do X?" still means the same as it used to ("Would you be upset if I do X"?). The answer is still "Yes, I do mind" or "No, I don't mind." People have simply shortened the response to yes or no, and affirmative answers seem to be seen as more polite, regardless of their meaning, so people just answer "yes".
    – TylerH
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:02










  • IMHO, the phrase "Do you mind if..." is inelegant and imprecise. In many (if not most) cases, the asker doesn't really want to know the internal thoughts of the respondent; he or she simply wants to know if the respondent will allow it. The question demands mental gymnastics that can complicate the conversation: What if the respondent does mind, but will allow the action anyway? What if he or she doesn't mind, but knows of some reason that the asker isn't allowed to perform the action? I would prefer to hear the phrase "May I..." when the asker merely wants permission.
    – George Cummins
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:37















up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











When a person asks "Do you mind if I ..." The response now days seems to be "Yes ..sure go ahead" which to me means they DO mind.. I hear this constantly on TV and in the work place, it just seems to bug me...










share|improve this question













When a person asks "Do you mind if I ..." The response now days seems to be "Yes ..sure go ahead" which to me means they DO mind.. I hear this constantly on TV and in the work place, it just seems to bug me...







meaning expressions






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asked Mar 17 '14 at 17:54









Jeff

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  • This doesn't imply a change in the meaning of the question, but rather the prevalence of a misunderstanding of the basic English rules used in the phrase. "Do you mind if I do X?" still means the same as it used to ("Would you be upset if I do X"?). The answer is still "Yes, I do mind" or "No, I don't mind." People have simply shortened the response to yes or no, and affirmative answers seem to be seen as more polite, regardless of their meaning, so people just answer "yes".
    – TylerH
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:02










  • IMHO, the phrase "Do you mind if..." is inelegant and imprecise. In many (if not most) cases, the asker doesn't really want to know the internal thoughts of the respondent; he or she simply wants to know if the respondent will allow it. The question demands mental gymnastics that can complicate the conversation: What if the respondent does mind, but will allow the action anyway? What if he or she doesn't mind, but knows of some reason that the asker isn't allowed to perform the action? I would prefer to hear the phrase "May I..." when the asker merely wants permission.
    – George Cummins
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:37




















  • This doesn't imply a change in the meaning of the question, but rather the prevalence of a misunderstanding of the basic English rules used in the phrase. "Do you mind if I do X?" still means the same as it used to ("Would you be upset if I do X"?). The answer is still "Yes, I do mind" or "No, I don't mind." People have simply shortened the response to yes or no, and affirmative answers seem to be seen as more polite, regardless of their meaning, so people just answer "yes".
    – TylerH
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:02










  • IMHO, the phrase "Do you mind if..." is inelegant and imprecise. In many (if not most) cases, the asker doesn't really want to know the internal thoughts of the respondent; he or she simply wants to know if the respondent will allow it. The question demands mental gymnastics that can complicate the conversation: What if the respondent does mind, but will allow the action anyway? What if he or she doesn't mind, but knows of some reason that the asker isn't allowed to perform the action? I would prefer to hear the phrase "May I..." when the asker merely wants permission.
    – George Cummins
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:37


















This doesn't imply a change in the meaning of the question, but rather the prevalence of a misunderstanding of the basic English rules used in the phrase. "Do you mind if I do X?" still means the same as it used to ("Would you be upset if I do X"?). The answer is still "Yes, I do mind" or "No, I don't mind." People have simply shortened the response to yes or no, and affirmative answers seem to be seen as more polite, regardless of their meaning, so people just answer "yes".
– TylerH
Mar 17 '14 at 18:02




This doesn't imply a change in the meaning of the question, but rather the prevalence of a misunderstanding of the basic English rules used in the phrase. "Do you mind if I do X?" still means the same as it used to ("Would you be upset if I do X"?). The answer is still "Yes, I do mind" or "No, I don't mind." People have simply shortened the response to yes or no, and affirmative answers seem to be seen as more polite, regardless of their meaning, so people just answer "yes".
– TylerH
Mar 17 '14 at 18:02












IMHO, the phrase "Do you mind if..." is inelegant and imprecise. In many (if not most) cases, the asker doesn't really want to know the internal thoughts of the respondent; he or she simply wants to know if the respondent will allow it. The question demands mental gymnastics that can complicate the conversation: What if the respondent does mind, but will allow the action anyway? What if he or she doesn't mind, but knows of some reason that the asker isn't allowed to perform the action? I would prefer to hear the phrase "May I..." when the asker merely wants permission.
– George Cummins
Mar 17 '14 at 18:37






IMHO, the phrase "Do you mind if..." is inelegant and imprecise. In many (if not most) cases, the asker doesn't really want to know the internal thoughts of the respondent; he or she simply wants to know if the respondent will allow it. The question demands mental gymnastics that can complicate the conversation: What if the respondent does mind, but will allow the action anyway? What if he or she doesn't mind, but knows of some reason that the asker isn't allowed to perform the action? I would prefer to hear the phrase "May I..." when the asker merely wants permission.
– George Cummins
Mar 17 '14 at 18:37












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What I hear when somebody says "Do you mind if I.." is indistinguishable from "May I..", just a bit softer. So I'm definitely a culprit in your books. It wasn't even immediately obvious what was bothering you about it.



There's also the other "Do you *mind*?" that is not a question at all.






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  • Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
    – TylerH
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:10












  • @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:15








  • 1




    It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
    – TylerH
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:19






  • 1




    @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Mar 17 '14 at 18:25






  • 2




    It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
    – Cyberherbalist
    Mar 17 '14 at 19:11


















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The wrong answer is usually given to the question Do you mind?



For instance: "Do you mind if I borrow your book?" Most people would answer "Yes." This is given incorrectly. "Yes" means "Yes I do mind. You can't borrow the book." The correct answer is "No." "No" means "No I don't mind if you borrow the book."



The words "Do you mind..." have the same sense as "Would it bother you..." and you would complete the question with a phrase along the lines of "if I did X?"



This is what the article is speaking of. A full answer shortened to one word which is often misrepresented.






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    Actually the required answer to this question should be "No,I don't mind."this creates atmosphere of showing that you have accepted what you were questioned about






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    • 1




      This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
      – Chappo
      Nov 27 at 5:27


















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    No, the meaning has not changed. An example of when another person had no clue what it means: A co-worker and I were about to start our shift. On this job, one person starts at the front desk, and the other goes around on foot, checking things. Every two hours we switch. This co-worker came in and asked (quote) "Do you mind starting at the desk? I said "No'. This co-worker proceeded to go to the front desk and sit down, as though I had said "Yes'.



    I am sure my reply to this co-worker's question did not require a "Yes" answer, since I wanted to start at the front desk. This co-worker obviously was not familiar with simple English Grammar. Had this co-worker asked "Do you mind if I start at the front desk?", that would have been an entirely different matter (and reply from me). No, the meaning has not changed.






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      4 Answers
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      4 Answers
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      What I hear when somebody says "Do you mind if I.." is indistinguishable from "May I..", just a bit softer. So I'm definitely a culprit in your books. It wasn't even immediately obvious what was bothering you about it.



      There's also the other "Do you *mind*?" that is not a question at all.






      share|improve this answer





















      • Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:10












      • @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:15








      • 1




        It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:19






      • 1




        @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:25






      • 2




        It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
        – Cyberherbalist
        Mar 17 '14 at 19:11















      up vote
      2
      down vote













      What I hear when somebody says "Do you mind if I.." is indistinguishable from "May I..", just a bit softer. So I'm definitely a culprit in your books. It wasn't even immediately obvious what was bothering you about it.



      There's also the other "Do you *mind*?" that is not a question at all.






      share|improve this answer





















      • Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:10












      • @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:15








      • 1




        It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:19






      • 1




        @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:25






      • 2




        It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
        – Cyberherbalist
        Mar 17 '14 at 19:11













      up vote
      2
      down vote










      up vote
      2
      down vote









      What I hear when somebody says "Do you mind if I.." is indistinguishable from "May I..", just a bit softer. So I'm definitely a culprit in your books. It wasn't even immediately obvious what was bothering you about it.



      There's also the other "Do you *mind*?" that is not a question at all.






      share|improve this answer












      What I hear when somebody says "Do you mind if I.." is indistinguishable from "May I..", just a bit softer. So I'm definitely a culprit in your books. It wasn't even immediately obvious what was bothering you about it.



      There's also the other "Do you *mind*?" that is not a question at all.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Mar 17 '14 at 18:08









      Spehro Pefhany

      8,36212042




      8,36212042












      • Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:10












      • @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:15








      • 1




        It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:19






      • 1




        @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:25






      • 2




        It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
        – Cyberherbalist
        Mar 17 '14 at 19:11


















      • Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:10












      • @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:15








      • 1




        It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
        – TylerH
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:19






      • 1




        @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
        – Spehro Pefhany
        Mar 17 '14 at 18:25






      • 2




        It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
        – Cyberherbalist
        Mar 17 '14 at 19:11
















      Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
      – TylerH
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:10






      Sorry, what do you mean by "other "Do you mind?"" That is certainly still a question.
      – TylerH
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:10














      @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
      – Spehro Pefhany
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:15






      @TylerH It's not a question. It's something along the lines of a verbal "cease and desist". The question mark indicates the intonation.
      – Spehro Pefhany
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:15






      1




      1




      It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
      – TylerH
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:19




      It is a question, actually. It is the same question as the one in the original post of this thread. The only difference is that only the first half is said to facilitate the generality of the possible situations. It might be a rather pointed question, but it is still a question, nonetheless.
      – TylerH
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:19




      1




      1




      @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
      – Spehro Pefhany
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:25




      @TylerH Okay, a rhetorical question.
      – Spehro Pefhany
      Mar 17 '14 at 18:25




      2




      2




      It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
      – Cyberherbalist
      Mar 17 '14 at 19:11




      It's definitely rhetorical and very pointed. Say that someone enters your office and instead of politely taking a seat on the obvious visitor chair, or simply standing to deliver a question or make some greeting, sits on your desk, uninvited. This is generally perceived as disrespectful and the dissed one behind the desk might say "Do you mind?" with a look clearly directed at spot on the desk that the sitter is occupying. The question is not meant to be answered, but is a barely polite way of saying "Get off my desk, jerk!" There is no response expected but to comply, perhaps with "Sorry!"
      – Cyberherbalist
      Mar 17 '14 at 19:11












      up vote
      1
      down vote













      The wrong answer is usually given to the question Do you mind?



      For instance: "Do you mind if I borrow your book?" Most people would answer "Yes." This is given incorrectly. "Yes" means "Yes I do mind. You can't borrow the book." The correct answer is "No." "No" means "No I don't mind if you borrow the book."



      The words "Do you mind..." have the same sense as "Would it bother you..." and you would complete the question with a phrase along the lines of "if I did X?"



      This is what the article is speaking of. A full answer shortened to one word which is often misrepresented.






      share|improve this answer



























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        The wrong answer is usually given to the question Do you mind?



        For instance: "Do you mind if I borrow your book?" Most people would answer "Yes." This is given incorrectly. "Yes" means "Yes I do mind. You can't borrow the book." The correct answer is "No." "No" means "No I don't mind if you borrow the book."



        The words "Do you mind..." have the same sense as "Would it bother you..." and you would complete the question with a phrase along the lines of "if I did X?"



        This is what the article is speaking of. A full answer shortened to one word which is often misrepresented.






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          1
          down vote










          up vote
          1
          down vote









          The wrong answer is usually given to the question Do you mind?



          For instance: "Do you mind if I borrow your book?" Most people would answer "Yes." This is given incorrectly. "Yes" means "Yes I do mind. You can't borrow the book." The correct answer is "No." "No" means "No I don't mind if you borrow the book."



          The words "Do you mind..." have the same sense as "Would it bother you..." and you would complete the question with a phrase along the lines of "if I did X?"



          This is what the article is speaking of. A full answer shortened to one word which is often misrepresented.






          share|improve this answer














          The wrong answer is usually given to the question Do you mind?



          For instance: "Do you mind if I borrow your book?" Most people would answer "Yes." This is given incorrectly. "Yes" means "Yes I do mind. You can't borrow the book." The correct answer is "No." "No" means "No I don't mind if you borrow the book."



          The words "Do you mind..." have the same sense as "Would it bother you..." and you would complete the question with a phrase along the lines of "if I did X?"



          This is what the article is speaking of. A full answer shortened to one word which is often misrepresented.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 27 '15 at 23:15









          Sven Yargs

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          answered Apr 27 '15 at 20:22









          Harper Rants

          111




          111






















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              Actually the required answer to this question should be "No,I don't mind."this creates atmosphere of showing that you have accepted what you were questioned about






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.














              • 1




                This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
                – Chappo
                Nov 27 at 5:27















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              Actually the required answer to this question should be "No,I don't mind."this creates atmosphere of showing that you have accepted what you were questioned about






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.














              • 1




                This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
                – Chappo
                Nov 27 at 5:27













              up vote
              0
              down vote










              up vote
              0
              down vote









              Actually the required answer to this question should be "No,I don't mind."this creates atmosphere of showing that you have accepted what you were questioned about






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.









              Actually the required answer to this question should be "No,I don't mind."this creates atmosphere of showing that you have accepted what you were questioned about







              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.









              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer






              New contributor




              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              answered Nov 27 at 3:28









              Godwin

              1




              1




              New contributor




              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              New contributor





              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              Godwin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              • 1




                This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
                – Chappo
                Nov 27 at 5:27














              • 1




                This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
                – Chappo
                Nov 27 at 5:27








              1




              1




              This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
              – Chappo
              Nov 27 at 5:27




              This is virtually the same answer as this existing answer. At the very least, you should edit your answer so that it's correctly capitalised and punctuated - we are after all a site specialising in the English Language, so it's preferred that our answers model good English. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)
              – Chappo
              Nov 27 at 5:27










              up vote
              -1
              down vote













              No, the meaning has not changed. An example of when another person had no clue what it means: A co-worker and I were about to start our shift. On this job, one person starts at the front desk, and the other goes around on foot, checking things. Every two hours we switch. This co-worker came in and asked (quote) "Do you mind starting at the desk? I said "No'. This co-worker proceeded to go to the front desk and sit down, as though I had said "Yes'.



              I am sure my reply to this co-worker's question did not require a "Yes" answer, since I wanted to start at the front desk. This co-worker obviously was not familiar with simple English Grammar. Had this co-worker asked "Do you mind if I start at the front desk?", that would have been an entirely different matter (and reply from me). No, the meaning has not changed.






              share|improve this answer



























                up vote
                -1
                down vote













                No, the meaning has not changed. An example of when another person had no clue what it means: A co-worker and I were about to start our shift. On this job, one person starts at the front desk, and the other goes around on foot, checking things. Every two hours we switch. This co-worker came in and asked (quote) "Do you mind starting at the desk? I said "No'. This co-worker proceeded to go to the front desk and sit down, as though I had said "Yes'.



                I am sure my reply to this co-worker's question did not require a "Yes" answer, since I wanted to start at the front desk. This co-worker obviously was not familiar with simple English Grammar. Had this co-worker asked "Do you mind if I start at the front desk?", that would have been an entirely different matter (and reply from me). No, the meaning has not changed.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  -1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  -1
                  down vote









                  No, the meaning has not changed. An example of when another person had no clue what it means: A co-worker and I were about to start our shift. On this job, one person starts at the front desk, and the other goes around on foot, checking things. Every two hours we switch. This co-worker came in and asked (quote) "Do you mind starting at the desk? I said "No'. This co-worker proceeded to go to the front desk and sit down, as though I had said "Yes'.



                  I am sure my reply to this co-worker's question did not require a "Yes" answer, since I wanted to start at the front desk. This co-worker obviously was not familiar with simple English Grammar. Had this co-worker asked "Do you mind if I start at the front desk?", that would have been an entirely different matter (and reply from me). No, the meaning has not changed.






                  share|improve this answer














                  No, the meaning has not changed. An example of when another person had no clue what it means: A co-worker and I were about to start our shift. On this job, one person starts at the front desk, and the other goes around on foot, checking things. Every two hours we switch. This co-worker came in and asked (quote) "Do you mind starting at the desk? I said "No'. This co-worker proceeded to go to the front desk and sit down, as though I had said "Yes'.



                  I am sure my reply to this co-worker's question did not require a "Yes" answer, since I wanted to start at the front desk. This co-worker obviously was not familiar with simple English Grammar. Had this co-worker asked "Do you mind if I start at the front desk?", that would have been an entirely different matter (and reply from me). No, the meaning has not changed.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Nov 9 '16 at 8:13

























                  answered Nov 9 '16 at 8:07









                  Darryl E Williams

                  11




                  11






























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