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"Then you'll know when you're threatening to overstay your welcome."
But I could hardly tell her the real reason you're overstaying your welcome."
Many times it's not made at the right time, and you tend to overstay your welcome."
"There's such a thing as overstaying your welcome, man."
"There's an old saying - you shouldn't overstay your welcome.
Overstaying your welcome was one of them, second only to beating your head against a brick wall.
I am very clear you shouldn't overstay your welcome."
"It appears," he went on, "that a number of you have overstayed your welcomes here.
Those solutions are now out the window thanks to underground sensors that alert the authorities when you've overstayed your welcome.
I rather suspect that you've overstayed your welcome."
Do not overstay your welcome.
These people don't like anybody telling 'em no." "I think you've overstayed your welcome.
You've overstayed your welcome.
Just don't overstay your welcome."
"The biggest mistake that some tours make," Mr. Platt, "is overstaying your welcome."
"You can certainly overstay your welcome," he said, noting that ABC learned that lesson with "Millionaire."
Overstaying Your Welcome As for the answer to the first question, I didn't get a satisfactory explanation from the airlines that impose this rule.
Don't sell out, don't overstay your welcome, don't grow up: those are the three lessons of rock."
She then was promptly "erased", bringing a statement from Madame Red: "Thou shalt not overstay your welcome in the comics."
"You can't overstay your welcome," said Susan Byrd, 45, a Connecticut homemaker who tried out the pay toilet on a day trip to Manhattan.
'Yes, sir,' he said to Salvador, and then to Henry, 'Come along, pal, I think you've overstayed your welcome.'
Said Bryan Oliphant, an old school friend of Mr. Monacella's, "You can't overstay your welcome here."
Fail to win over the crowd instantly, and it will be loudly booing and waving you off the stage; overstay your welcome, and you'll be ceremoniously given the boot.
Do not overstay your welcome, the host will not normally express any sign of overt negativity toward the presence of the guest since it is considered extremely rude and disrespectful.
"You can talk to the manager on duty and explain your situation," Ms. Gordon said, and perhaps negotiate a better rate, but you're unlikely to be kicked out for overstaying your welcome.