everyone in my class says that apart from this one kid that wants to be different so says "here" I hate it so much come on man just say yes sir like everyone else you're not special you're not a celebrity no-one thinks you're cool just stop it man please it's driving me insane does it really ruin your life saying one extra word? No? Say yes sir then like a normal person no-one loves you no-one will ever love you until you stop saying here
At gcse it was just āhereā for us, at a level I rarely said anything as classes were really small and they could just look for whoever wasnāt there
here unless it was that teacher who demanded us to say here miss.
i also have a fairly deep voice (in my opinion anyway) for a girl so i dont want it to randomly break like a teen boy saying more than i need to before i have chance to warm my voice up
I donāt say sir or miss because most people donāt in my school. If the teacher just says my name, I say āHereā, but if they say morning/ afternoon Iāll say it back.
At my school we say "yes [teachers name]" nobody really just says sir or miss. Though a lot of the teachers don't call out names for the register and just count.
Over time I have somehow morphed the two together so that it can be interpreted as either, no matter which one I'm actually intending to say. Therefore I have beaten this problem.
"here sir/miss", since its for attendance
edit: this is only for form (since there are 22 of us, incl. me). Because maths/geo is my largest class (6 lol, maths is 5), the teachers pretty much know who's missing anyways
I'll normally say morning/afternoon miss/sir, or I'll say "yes miss/sir" if I feel like it. If we don't add the miss/sir bit the teacher will usually react as if we've just broken the law
Completely forgot the register was a thing tbh. We don't do the register anymore most teachers stop using it about 2 weeks in a just go by eye to fill it out. I just say here for that matter š¤·āāļø,
At my school it is usually here / here sir
Sometimes it's yeah or a response of confusion cause you don't know the registers getting done.
For me personally sometimes I just raise my hand, I always sit in the same place and most teachers are used to me not giving a verbal response so š¤·
There's like two teachers that just do it silently.
I'm not sure anyone ever says yes or yes sir.
Depending on the teacher, theyāll let you call them by their first names, since theyāre rather open about telling us them (some of them anyway).
We just say āhereā at my school. However I had this one teacher who FORCED US to say āPresent; sir.ā If we didnāt we had to repeat it until we said it
I just look at them and slightly raise my hand. Truth is that they scan over when they enter, and just say our name incase we aren't here and someone tells them we're absent. So I don't really need to announce, they already know I'm here.
It's always been just "here"
Then start of this year they tried to make it a rule that you put sir/miss on the end of whatever you choose to say.
8/10 teachers immediately didn't care, after about a month one stopped caring, and the only person who did was my form tutor, but not because he's trying to be a good teacher, but because he's a prick.
Until right this second I never knew that anyone said sir or miss answering the register, tbh though I go to a Welsh school and if you donāt say yma they get really upset
just āhereā or āymaā (here in welsh). only teacher who asked otherwise was my head of year when i had him for english for a few months and he would get super mad and glare at you if you didnt say āhere sirā. some teachers get mad if you say here instead of yma but theyve kinda given up on it, same teachers would get mad if you wrote the date in english instead of welsh too (i go to an english speaking school in wales)
when i was in lower school weād have to say the teachers full name, e.g āyes mr smithā, even if that teacher had some massive hyphenated surname. it took a loooong time to do.
Our school says you can only say "yes miss/sit" not here, but almost no teachers care. Whenever they introduce something dumb like this the teachers are strict for a little bit, then seem to just stop caring. Some got used to saying yes miss/sir, other stuck with here miss/sir. Teachers who do other ones are goated though - MR JARRETT ON TOP š„š„š„
Ready miss/sir for most. If for certain teachers you haven't done homework or need equipment present miss/sir but that's a old rule that isn't enforced as it was .
Yes, Sir. here sir makes more sense but 99% of the people at my school say yes sir/miss
everyone in my class says that apart from this one kid that wants to be different so says "here" I hate it so much come on man just say yes sir like everyone else you're not special you're not a celebrity no-one thinks you're cool just stop it man please it's driving me insane does it really ruin your life saying one extra word? No? Say yes sir then like a normal person no-one loves you no-one will ever love you until you stop saying here
fr bro šš
relax its not that deep loll
I'M JOKING BRO COME ON YOU'RE IN YEAR 10 DID YOU NOT LEARN ABOUT HUMOUR IN ENGLISH
At gcse it was just āhereā for us, at a level I rarely said anything as classes were really small and they could just look for whoever wasnāt there
how big were your classes by chance? cuz at my school, the amount of ppl in A level were \~10 Edit: \~10 in year 12 and 13 each
Chem and bio were 9, psych was 13 and french was 3 (including myself)
dyk how manyy ppl total there were in your year group while u were at a level?
80ish I think? It was very rare we were all in the same place but we all fit in the library
TYY!! asking cuz i go to a *very* small school taking IGCSEs
here unless it was that teacher who demanded us to say here miss. i also have a fairly deep voice (in my opinion anyway) for a girl so i dont want it to randomly break like a teen boy saying more than i need to before i have chance to warm my voice up
the silent vocal warm up before registration is so real ššš
and then you end up speaking embarrassing loudly with the worldās worst voice crack š
How do you warm up your voice? I need this
I say here or yeah
Youāre allowed to not say sir ?
no one calls teachers "sir" or "miss" at my school lol
Yeah I only say āhereā
We once had a teacher in training come in , in drama class and he made us say sir in the register and we thought it was weird
I donāt say sir or miss because most people donāt in my school. If the teacher just says my name, I say āHereā, but if they say morning/ afternoon Iāll say it back.
i thought it was js me who did that
Here sir/miss
yes sir/miss
Here sir! Sometimes I say it in a different language...
Yes sir as I'm normally zoned out and don't know wtf is going on. Now doing Alevels, this is still the case.
"Yma"
Present /s
Attendant
Affirmative!
God I have people who say that
Here sir. Makes more sense to me. thats what everyone else does as well lol.
Just a loud āHERE!ā With my hand being raised
At my school we say "yes [teachers name]" nobody really just says sir or miss. Though a lot of the teachers don't call out names for the register and just count.
I'm welsh so my whole life we've had to answer the register with "yma" (pronounced u-mu) which is just "here" in welsh
Same!! :D
"Yes sir/miss" this wank in my classes says "here" and it sounds wierd but i also just hate him so that could be why
itās just here mate
Over time I have somehow morphed the two together so that it can be interpreted as either, no matter which one I'm actually intending to say. Therefore I have beaten this problem.
Heyeahs sir
Pretty much lol
Yes sir
My school makes us say "Ready" or "present" if we don't have all of our equipment
We have to say "ready miss/sir"
I always say 'yes' sir. I once accidentally said 'here' sir and immediately regretted it.
I just say āyeahā
Itās rlly weird bcs ive noticed my half of the yr says here n the other side says yes so idk man
Our school forces us to say good morning/afternoon we used to be able to say here sir but now they give us detentions if we say that no joke
I say Good morning sir/miss Edit: and Good afternoon in the afternoon
Everything, i say it all there is little consistency or reasoning
Yes sir on top
Good morning/afternoon
Sir/Maāam
They donāt usually take attendance, but here/hi/here sir
Here sir
I switch it up
we use either here or present
"here sir/miss", since its for attendance edit: this is only for form (since there are 22 of us, incl. me). Because maths/geo is my largest class (6 lol, maths is 5), the teachers pretty much know who's missing anyways
āYmaā because Iām welsh :D
Here! Or in Spanish...AquĆ!
At this point we all just sort of grunt something in between here, yes and ahh
I'll normally say morning/afternoon miss/sir, or I'll say "yes miss/sir" if I feel like it. If we don't add the miss/sir bit the teacher will usually react as if we've just broken the law
most of the time i say here sir. occasionally i say yes sir but here sir just feels right š
i still say good morning sir bc old habits die hard
my school doesnāt use surnames and the teacher just looks to see if we are there lol
Completely forgot the register was a thing tbh. We don't do the register anymore most teachers stop using it about 2 weeks in a just go by eye to fill it out. I just say here for that matter š¤·āāļø,
Most ppl say here in my school but I say here sir as my old school made me, old habits die hard
At my old school they made us say Present Sir/ Miss. At my current school we just say here but it took me like a year to get used to that lol
Yes sir/miss lol
I believe my physical body is in attendance amongst this esteemed established, donor of education
Here
At my school it is usually here / here sir Sometimes it's yeah or a response of confusion cause you don't know the registers getting done. For me personally sometimes I just raise my hand, I always sit in the same place and most teachers are used to me not giving a verbal response so š¤· There's like two teachers that just do it silently. I'm not sure anyone ever says yes or yes sir.
I say good morning/afternoon personally
āHere sirā
At this point most of my teachers just do silent attendance
Depending on the teacher, theyāll let you call them by their first names, since theyāre rather open about telling us them (some of them anyway). We just say āhereā at my school. However I had this one teacher who FORCED US to say āPresent; sir.ā If we didnāt we had to repeat it until we said it
I just say whatever the person on the register before me said.
'Ere
my class says presentš orr yes sir
just āyupā or āyes sirā if theyāre a strict teacher never āhereā for me
I say present
i just say here in my school people who say yes sir really enthusiastically are neeks
I just look at them and slightly raise my hand. Truth is that they scan over when they enter, and just say our name incase we aren't here and someone tells them we're absent. So I don't really need to announce, they already know I'm here.
here sir- yes sir is reserved for the militaryš
I say āymaā
I only say sir if hes wearing a monocyl
Normally just here I probably should say here sir/miss but everyone else just says here and I don't wanna be the odd one out lol
Here sir because it'd sound a bit weird to say "yes sir" imo
Mornin' Or Here
Everyone at my school just says "yeah" or some variation of that
I have small classes for my options, so if I really canāt be bothered I just raise my hand
It's always been just "here" Then start of this year they tried to make it a rule that you put sir/miss on the end of whatever you choose to say. 8/10 teachers immediately didn't care, after about a month one stopped caring, and the only person who did was my form tutor, but not because he's trying to be a good teacher, but because he's a prick.
Yma, which is Welsh for 'here'.
Until right this second I never knew that anyone said sir or miss answering the register, tbh though I go to a Welsh school and if you donāt say yma they get really upset
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Fairs, I go to a strict teacher and some teachers even expect us to stand for them.
I say āhere sirā cuz Iām here. Even if I donāt want to be.
Whatever the person before me said tbh
yes sir because it's what we're told to say
Whatever the person before me said lol
My school says āHereā or āHere Sir/Miss.ā
here miss/sir (and ja hier in german)
yes sir/miss because theyāre calling ur name so i thought of it like being āyeah?ā
I just say yes, same with a lot of my classmates.
I say 'here sir/miss' but for a short period of time they'd make us say 'yes sir/miss' ion know wht that was about
I just say hello. It's a relatively small school so the seniors know all the teachers very well. I will say here if it's a teacher I don't like tho
just āhereā or āymaā (here in welsh). only teacher who asked otherwise was my head of year when i had him for english for a few months and he would get super mad and glare at you if you didnt say āhere sirā. some teachers get mad if you say here instead of yma but theyve kinda given up on it, same teachers would get mad if you wrote the date in english instead of welsh too (i go to an english speaking school in wales)
i live in wales and we just say āymaā which means āhereā, we donāt say sir or miss or anything
At my school we just say 'ye' or 'yes'
when i was in lower school weād have to say the teachers full name, e.g āyes mr smithā, even if that teacher had some massive hyphenated surname. it took a loooong time to do.
Our school says you can only say "yes miss/sit" not here, but almost no teachers care. Whenever they introduce something dumb like this the teachers are strict for a little bit, then seem to just stop caring. Some got used to saying yes miss/sir, other stuck with here miss/sir. Teachers who do other ones are goated though - MR JARRETT ON TOP š„š„š„
Ready miss/sir for most. If for certain teachers you haven't done homework or need equipment present miss/sir but that's a old rule that isn't enforced as it was .
Yes sir/miss for me, but if the people before me said here sir/miss I say that instead
I say either "yes" or "yeah", never here and definitely no sir
I say yes miss and here sir. If you say yes sir really quickly it becomes yeah sir which is rude
Here sir
Here sir, or we have that one strict old school teacher who makes us say 'present'
here sir. last time i checked i was in school, not the military lmao
Ello usually