"Rude" was named after the reggae term "rude boy" and originally based on a real-life situation. The lead singer of Magic!, Nasri, had been in an unhealthy relationship with a previous girlfriend. After the two of them got into a fight with each other, the band based the song off that headline. The couple was in a "mean time" when they were both being rude to each other, as Nasri says in what he describes as a "dark vibe".[4]

This was my thought too! And I also wondered if the second language was one other than English, so maybe what they said would be considered less rude in another culture or comes across rude in translation?


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I don't know if this problem is unique to me, I have a digital art store....with a few custom digital download listings, and lately I've experienced an increasing amount of abuse from rude customers who do not read the listing, even when I make it super clear!

Luckily, most of my customers are great.....but I seem to be getting an increase in very aggressive and rude customers, who make crazy demands like I am a robot. The latest today was a woman who placed an order for a customised item, she is in a different time zone to me...my turn around time is 1-2 business days, within an hour of her purchase she was sending me abusive messages saying she expected her item on the hour, and she better get it soon or else! ( it was actually 2am on my end!)...

With my store, 5-7 business days, I used to sometimes get inquiries and occasionally a rude person who did not understand that I have a long queue and do orders as they come in. SO.... I made a message that goes out with every order with the above information, along with a link to my RUSH PREP FEE if they want to pay to get stuff faster. since I did that I get very very few of that sort of message. Reduced the stress level to near zero.,

An in-depth look at community affairs on a local, national and international level, with interviews and commentary. Hosted by Sabrina Jacobs. Listen to A Rude Awakening anytime via our community-powered KPFA Archive kpfa.org/program/a-rude-awakening

I don't think what you said is inherently rude, but neither do I think it would be a stretch for some to construe it that way. In some circumstances it might be taken as a little dismissive, or overly informal by someone accustomed to being treated with extra respect. I would probably save "you can go" for those people who it's safe for you to kid around with. It might sort of carry the connotation (even if jokingly) that the person needs your permission to go.

Yes, it sounds rude. It indicates that you are giving him permission to leave, as if he was your servant who was required to come when summoned and then dismissed when you no longer wanted him around.

Follow on thought: Only case I can think of where it wouldn't be rude would be if the other person was in some position where they were NOT allowed to leave, and you now give them permission. Like you are a police officer and this person has been arrested, and then you say, "Charges have been dropped. You are free to leave now." Something of that sort.

can is a word with several meanings. In the set phrase "you can go now", can means that you are giving somebody permission to go. This definitely sounds rude if you are not in a position of authority over that person. I wouldn't even consider saying it to an employee.

There are a few ways to do this that won't be rude."Have a nice day!" is probably the most common way to signal that you're through with this transaction. Something like "Okay, that should do it. Here's your phone. Have a nice day!"

Yes, it sounds incredibly rude. I wouldn't use that phrasing regardless of context; it's not an English language issue, it's a social awareness issue. It is rude enough that it (in some variant) has been often used for comedic effect, typically by characters which are abusing their authority (police, bad bosses, or the like).

The difference is: if you need something, say that you need it; if you want to know what they want, ask. If you need them to do something (rather than just you need to do something), you have to soften that from a command to a request, in most contexts. If you have a guest at home, "Get out" (command) is extremely rude; "I need you to go" is quite rude; "You can leave now" is about equally rude; "Hey, sorry, could you please head out soon? I need to get started on my homework" (request+explanation) is probably the least polite form which would ever be normally used. "I need to go soon" (what you're doing) is okay; "I need to go pick up my kids from school" (what you're doing+explanation) is normal.

The existing answers are very good, but I'd like to add that something that can make a statement seem rude is lack of segue and opening for the other person to respond. That is, you did something together with your client (fixed their problem), and then abruptly changed the topic (time to leave). Besides the class or service mindset stuff mentioned in the other answers, an abrupt change of topic can confuse or upset the person you are trying to communicate with.Consider this example without the customer service aspect:

Person 1: "What did you think of the game last night?"

Person 2: "It was fine. I have to go."

Because Person 2 does not provide a segue, it comes off rude because Person 1 is missing information and has to fill in the gaps. When you don't fill in the gaps, the other person can easily assume the worst intentions. In this case, it could mean that: 17dc91bb1f

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