The phrase 'pas de quoi lol beaucoup' contains four French words, and one word from text messaging. Its meaning is [you're] very welcome, laugh out loud. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'pas' means 'not'. The preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. The relative pronun 'quoi' means 'what'. And the adverb 'beaucoup' means 'a great deal'.
You are welcome (as an answer to Merci/thank you)
Not at all, it's not important.
Il n'y a pas de quoi.
The phrase 'pas de quoi' is a way of saying welcome in French, as a response to being thanked. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'pas' means 'not'. The preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. And the pronoun 'quoi' means 'what'.Literally 'not of what' it is a contraction of 'il n'y a pas de quoi'.Very idiomatic, it translates to 'nothing to it, not at all, don't mention it.'Almost always said in response to an apology.
it doesn't matter, it's not important
The sentence 'Il n'y a pas de quoi' means You're welcome. In the word-by-word translation, the word 'il' means 'he, it'. The adverb 'ne...pas' means 'not'. The adverb 'y' means 'there'. The verb 'a' means '[he/she/it] has'. The preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. And the relative pronoun means 'what'.***It translates loosely to "It's nothing" and is often used as a way of saying "You're welcome."
You can say, "de rien," "pas de problème," or "il n'y a pas de quoi,".
Il n'y a pas de quoi.
The phrase 'pas de quoi' is a way of saying welcome in French, as a response to being thanked. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'pas' means 'not'. The preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. And the pronoun 'quoi' means 'what'.Literally 'not of what' it is a contraction of 'il n'y a pas de quoi'.Very idiomatic, it translates to 'nothing to it, not at all, don't mention it.'Almost always said in response to an apology.
as a reponse to a question:"how is the experience going? are you experiencing any problem?"-"no problem [so far]"-"pas de problème" or "sans problème""no problem" as an answer to: "thanks""de rien" or "pas de quoi / il n'y a pas de quoi" or "je vous en prie" or ...
it doesn't matter, it's not important
Pas de croix means "No crossing" or Pas de quoi means "You're welcome."
"I don't know what to say"
The sentence 'Il n'y a pas de quoi' means You're welcome. In the word-by-word translation, the word 'il' means 'he, it'. The adverb 'ne...pas' means 'not'. The adverb 'y' means 'there'. The verb 'a' means '[he/she/it] has'. The preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. And the relative pronoun means 'what'.***It translates loosely to "It's nothing" and is often used as a way of saying "You're welcome."
It isn't important - not at all
You can say, "de rien," "pas de problème," or "il n'y a pas de quoi,".
after being thanked you can say: de rien (synonym: pas de quoi) Not at all - Pas du tout
"Je ne sais pas de quoi tu parles" (or 'de quoi vous parlez' to be more polite)
The commonest answers to 'merci beaucoup' in French are: - pas de quoi / il n'y a pas de quoi (no problem, that's nothing) - de rien (that's nothing) - je vous en prie (you're welcome).