Funny List of THANK YOU phrases at this Thanksgiving Day

happy turkey says please become vegetarian
  • You’re so thankful. Or maybe I’m so thankful because I know you? So THANK YOU!
  • THANK YOU inside out!
  • I’ll spam your e-mail with thousands of my THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU…
  • I’m so grateful from my head to my toes. Thank you!
  • My THANK YOU words are like a thank-you card, with a hug and a fold in it.
  • If I had a dollar for every time I say THANK YOU, I’d be a millionaire.
  • You are so helpful, so kind, so generous, so thoughtful, so perfect. You are like a mirror where I can see my reflection. THANK YOU for that!
  • The way I say THANK YOU proves my excellent manners.
  • Thanks everyone for nothing.
  • I’ll THANK YOU the next time.
  • Many thanks to everyone who loves me! The rest of you are dead to me.
  • Don’t you think you’re the only one who knows how to be grateful? So THANK YOU!
  • Thank you for still being my friends, despite being aware of every raunchy, unflattering, explicit details of my miserable life.
  • If you hate saying “you’re welcome,” so I’ll do you the favor and not say thank you, but I am feeling it on the inside.
  • I would say you’re the greatest, but you already think I’m the greatest. Thank you!
  • Grassy ass! (Thank you in Spanisssh 🙂
  • Thank you beer-y much!
  • The way I show appreciation is by not saying THANK YOU at all. Silence is GOLD!
  • I would like to thank my middle finger for always sticking up for me when I needed it.
  • My THANK YOU outside is my happy dance inside.
  • If you could read my mind, then you’d know how grateful I am for you at this very moment. Thank you!
  • If I knew how to say thank you, I would.

Please ADD YOUR FUNNY THANK YOU to this list.

According to WIKIPEDIA Thanksgiving is a national holiday celebrated on various dates in the United States, Canada, Grenada, Saint Lucia, and Liberia. It began as a day of giving thanks for the blessing of the harvest and of the preceding year. Similarly named festival holidays occur in Germany and Japan. Thanksgiving is celebrated on the second Monday of October in Canada and on the fourth Thursday of November in the United States and around the same part of the year in other places.

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