It's my first day at work

Status
Not open for further replies.

99bottles

Banned
Joined
Apr 11, 2018
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Greek
Home Country
Greece
Current Location
Greece
It's my first day at work, and/but my colleagues already dislike me.

l know that, logically, I should put but, but something inside me tells me to put and.
 
Do so then.
 
Not a teacher.

I'd say it depends on what you want to convey with the sentence. I feel like the first option is more matter-of-fact, and the second says: "Just my luck!" (or that's how it sounds to me, at least).
 
Not a teacher.

I'd say it depends on what you want to convey with the sentence. I feel like the first option is more matter-of-fact, and the second says: "Just my luck!" (or that's how it sounds to me, at least).
Wait, which one says Just my luck? And or but?
 
It's my first day at work, and/but my colleagues already dislike me.
Jemima said the first option is more matter-of-fact, and the second says: "Just my luck!"
 
Jemima said the first option is more matter-of-fact, and the second says: "Just my luck!"

I'd say it's entirely the other way around. It's the and that says 'just my luck!'.

I assume that's what Jemima23 meant to say too. And it's the sense of irony given by and that I think 99bottles is picking up.
 
Last edited:
I might use "only" there, thus:

It's only my first day at work, and my colleagues already dislike me.

Yes, I'm pretty sure I'd use "only" there.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top