thanks
When some says to you, " My pleasure. " it is usually a response to you having said Thank You. No further response is necessary.
The polite response is... "You're welcome."
There is no need to reply, if someone says "it's my pleasure", it will be in response to you thanking them for something. Their response closes the conversation.
I have no idea hince why I’m asking I’ve said thank you too many times
thank you !!
Thank you
Well
Your welcome
No. The correct phrase is "the pleasure is all mine", but this is not an appropriate response to "thank you". "The pleasure is all mine" is a polite and gracious response that can be used when the other person indicates pleasure. For example, if someone says, "It was a pleasure talking to you" or "It was a pleasure meeting you", you can respond with "The pleasure was all mine." If someone says "thank you", the traditional response is "You're welcome."
"El gusto es mío""The pleasure is mine"To say the Pleasure is all mine in Spanish, You would say: El placer es mío
voluptas est mea(PLEASURE IS MINE)
Dumas
When someone thanks you. You can then say "It's my pleasure," or say "You're welcome."
Gracias (Thanks) el (the) placer (pleasure) es todo (is all) mio (mine). GRAH-thee-ass, ell plahTHAIR ess TAWdaw MEE-aw (th/TH as in 'thin')
Pleasure to meet you!
"El gusto es mío" (the pleasure is mine) would normally be the response to someone saying "mucho gusto conocerle" (very pleased to meet you), which is something one would say when being intoduced to a new person. No response is really necessary to the term the pleasure is mine, unless you want to get into a string of increasingly useless and boring reposts.
Pazhalsta - Пожалуйста - should do it - (You're welcome).
After being introduced to someone in Spanish, you would respond: Mucho gusto. This is the equivalent of: It is a pleasure.
The correct phrase in such situation would be "Cała przyjemność po mojej stronie" (difficult to pronounce, especially "ść") which literally means "The all pleasure is on my side".
Say "It's a pleasure to help." Or "You're welcome."