no thanks to









no thanks to


verb (used with object)

  1. to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.

noun

  1. Usually thanks. a grateful feeling or acknowledgment of a benefit, favor, or the like, expressed by words or otherwise: to return a borrowed book with thanks.

interjection

  1. thanks, (used as an informal expression of gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment).

Idioms

  1. have oneself to thank, to be personally to blame; have the responsibility: The citizens have only themselves to thank for corruption in government.
  2. no thanks to, (used to express annoyance) not owing to: I caught my flight after all, no thanks to you.
  3. thank God, (used as an interjection to express relief, thankfulness, etc.)Also thank goodness, thank heaven.
  4. thanks to, (used to express gratitude or blame) because of; owing to: Thanks to good organization and hard work, the benefit concert was a great success. The case went poorly thanks to the lawyer’s incompetence.
  5. thank you, (used as an interjection to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment, as for a gift, favor, service, or courtesy).

verb (tr)

  1. to convey feelings of gratitude to
  2. to hold responsiblehe has his creditors to thank for his bankruptcy
  3. used in exclamations of reliefthank goodness; thank God
  4. I’ll thank you to used ironically to intensify a command, request, etcI’ll thank you to mind your own business

v.Old English þancian “to give thanks,” from Proto-Germanic *thankojan (cf. Old Saxon thancon, Old Norse þakka, Danish takke, Old Frisian thankia, Middle Dutch, German danken “to thank”), from *thankoz “thought, gratitude,” from PIE root *tong- “to think, feel.” For sense evolution, cf. related Old English noun þanc, þonc, originally “thought,” but by c.1000 “good thoughts, gratitude.” The whole group is from the same root as think (q.v.). In ironical use, “to blame,” from 1550s. To thank (someone) for nothing is recorded from 1703. Related: Thanked; thanking. see thanks to. In addition to the idioms beginning with thank

  • thank God
  • thank one’s lucky stars
  • thanks to
  • also see:

  • give thanks for small blessings
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