14

I've heard this phrase in a couple of movies, it was being used like this:

-Hey, John!

-Well, hey yourself, Mike!

Sounds pretty simple, but my question is about how appropriate is it to say that in a conversation. It sounds a little "offensive" to me, and in the movies it was being used with a negative meaning (e.g. greeting a person who you don't really like to see/talk with).

So does it really have a "negative" meaning, or am I wrong?

3 Answers 3

19

Some people consider hey to be an inappropriate greeting ("Hay is for horses"), but among those who do not, I wouldn't say that hey yourself has any inherently negative connotation. Its meaning is literal: hey to you as well

I could say it dismissively or menacingly, but also flirtatiously or cordially. In such casual exchanges, the tone, tempo, body language, and other cues will impart far more meaning.

2
  • 1
    Wouldn't the literal meaning really be "say hey to yourself"?
    – Marc.2377
    Commented Dec 7, 2016 at 6:00
  • 4
    @Marc.2377 That meaning could be communicated with tone and timing, but that is not the tone and timing I customarily hear it.
    – choster
    Commented Dec 7, 2016 at 14:59
6

Of course it would depend on the speaker (tone and attitude) and some special situation you might have. If you want it to become a cold greeting, that's up to you as well.

But the expression "Hey yourself" per se just means "Hello to you too."

It's a casual expression so you can take that into account. It's the same as "Hello/ Hi back," which is another innocent greeting.

5

I've only heard this phrase used a few times, and it was always used negatively. Some people consider "hey" a rude greeting, so if someone says it to them, some reply "hey yourself". It would be similar to someone yelling, "You're stupid, Bob", and Bob replying, "No, you're the one who's stupid".

That said, if someone said "hey yourself" to me in a cheerful tone of voice, etc, no indication that they were insulted or attempting to be insulting, then I would take it as equivalent to "hello to you too".

(As to why some people object to the greeting "hey" ... Like many words, what is polite and what is offensive is a matter of social convention, not any rigorous rules of logic.)

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .