Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Ways of agreeing with someone in American Thesaurus
Ways of agreeing with someone
of course (adverb)
used for agreeing or disagreeing with someone
great (adjective)
mainly spoken used for expressing pleasure or agreement
used for agreeing or disagreeing with someone
mkay (interjection)
very informal a way of writing OK that shows how it is said informally
amen to that ()
used for saying that you are both very intelligent when you and another person have the same idea
used for emphasizing that you agree with something that someone has said
I hear you ()
used for saying that something seems reasonable
me either ()
used when someone else has made a negative statement and you mean it is also true of you. This is considered to be incorrect by speakers of British English who would say me neither
used for emphasizing that you agree with someone
okey-dokey (interjection)
informal OK: used for showing that you accept something or agree with something
right on ()
used for emphasizing that you agree with or support someone or something
someone never said a truer word ()
used for saying that you agree completely with what someone has just said
that’s about the size of it ()
used for saying that you agree with someone’s description or opinion of something
very much so ()
used for emphasizing your agreement with what someone has said
why not...? ()
used for agreeing to a suggestion or request
used for expressing strong agreement with what someone has said
you said it ()
used for agreeing with what someone has said although you would not have said it yourself, especially when they admit they have done something bad or wrong
you said it (American)
American used for agreeing with a suggestion that someone has made