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Sales have been slow and we had to let go three of our employees; drastic times call for drastic measures.
I'd like to talk with you again about what happened. Reply: Oh, come on. Let's not beat a dead horse.
I want to stay up. I am not tired. Reply: Do as you are told and go to bed right now.
Why can't you just do it the way everyone else does? Why do you always have to go against the grain?
Steve is in our office and he just found out about the deal. Reply: I can hear him blowing his top.
Hurry mom, I really have to go to the bathroom. Reply: We won't be there for another 20 minutes. Bite the bullet.
I know we've talked about this already, and I hate to belabor the point, but I still don't think you are understanding me.
Would you like to go to a party tonight? Reply: I can't. I'm way too tired. I've been burning the candle at both ends all week.
Last night I was telling a joke, and I really put my foot in my mouth. I had no idea I was talking about Rob's wife.
Mom, Dad! Can you come to my room? I think there is something under my bed! Reply: Son, you just go back to bed, and stop crying wolf.
On his last day on the job he got in a huge fight with his boss. Answer: Why would he want to go burning his bridges like that? Someday he might want to work there again.
You do like that girl, don't you? Answer: No! I don't! Not at all! Why do you think so? Reply: You protest too much. #Protest too much comes from Hamlet by William Shakespeare; the Queen speaking: The lady doth protest too much, methinks. (Note: people do not usually use the word methinks when they are speaking English today.) To protest too much is to insist so passionately about something not being true that people suspect the opposite of what you are saying.