You can say 'you are more than welcome' at appropriate times like once when driving along on the highway not in any hurry and i saw a guy pulled over on the shoulder with the hood of his car up so I stopped to see if I could help. "Ya gotta drive me to the nearest garage, I need a tow truck" he said. Ok fine. Found a garage for him. "Much appreciated and thanks for stopping" he said and handed me about a whole thousand dollars in twenties" "you're more than welcome" I replied -hoping maybe I could be of further assistance to this eccentric millionaire guy. But he just walked away.
Grandfather say.. "You are welcome to if by your will what you want. You are encouraged to if by mine what I want and is a welcome that is more than."
This post was edited by O-uknow at July 3, 2018 6:39 AM MDT
Isn't that still just welcome? There must be another word to go beyond welcome. How about "Wambly." If you say, "Thank you," I'll say "You're wambly." Now you'll know what I mean.
This post was edited by CallMeIshmael at July 3, 2018 8:36 PM MDT
It means "I expect something in return" or "I did that thing despite not wanting to" or if an employee is talking to their employer it means "I hate you and want you to die a slow and painful death."