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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

Not want to talk

What do English people say when someone says or does something that is unpleasant to the other and they become upset and don't want to talk to them anymore?

Are these expressions appropriate? Is there any other way to say?

"I'm through with you?"
"I'm not on speaking terms on you"?
  

Top answer

" This is American English. Anonymous "I'm not on speaking terms on you" "I'm not on speaking terms with you". This is possible but, uncommon.

  • " This is American English.
  • Anonymous "I'm not on speaking terms on you" "I'm not on speaking terms with you".
  • This is possible but, uncommon.
  • More common would be, "I'm not speaking (or talking ) to you".
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1 Answers
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Anonymous"I'm through with you?"
This is American English.
Anonymous"I'm not on speaking terms on you"
"I'm not on speaking terms with you". This is possible but, uncommon. More common would be, "I'm not speaking (or talking) to you".

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