how about thanking the person then go on to say what happend to your uncle / how your loss affected you & your family? how about thanking the person then go on to say what happend to your uncle / how your loss affected you & your family?
The accepted proper way to respond to a person expressing their sympathy for your loss (as far as "etiquette" goes) is to simply say "Thank You".
sorry for you loss. that says it all.
I'm sorry you feel that way....
u can say ''yeah. you are right.'' or you can say 'well you heard it'' but say it nicely.
Just tell them you are sorry but you do not feel that way about them.
Usally someone says sorry to get rid of guilt and children see adults say sorry when they have done something wrong and children are very impressionable so children copy the actions of adults either that or they are told to say sorry.
You can respond with a simple "Thank you for your sympathy" or "I appreciate your concern."
just say im sorry i really like someone else and it will work i used it
That would be for you to decide - meaning if they say sorry and you believe them then that would be up to you if you are going to forgive them or not. It is hard to trust someone that has breached it and some that say sorry just to fix what they did wrong knowing it was wrong but only say sorry to get through it.
Sometime people say that when they mean they cant forgive you for what happened
You would say "sorry for your family's loss" when referring to the loss experienced by a specific family. If you were addressing multiple families, you could say "sorry for your families' loss." However, in most contexts, it's common to refer to the loss of one family at a time, making "family's loss" the more appropriate choice.