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PhrasesAt the TobacconistGrazie mille!
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Grazie mille!

Thank you very much!

Pronunciation

GRA-tsie MIL-le — 'grazie' has two syllables with the 'z' pronounced as 'ts'; 'mille' has the double 'l' geminate. Stress on the first syllable of each word.

When to use it

Use this as a warm expression of thanks, stronger than a simple 'grazie'. It is appropriate in any situation at the tobacconist where you want to express genuine appreciation.

What it means

'Mille' literally means 'a thousand' — so 'grazie mille' = 'a thousand thanks'. It is more emphatic than plain 'grazie' but less theatrical than 'grazie infinite' (infinite thanks) or 'grazie tantissime' (very many thanks). All are correct and commonly used.

Variations

Grazie tante!

Many thanks!

Slightly warmer than 'grazie' but less emphatic than 'grazie mille'

Grazie infinite!

Thank you infinitely!

The most emphatic form — used for significant favours

La ringrazio molto.

I thank you very much.

Formal version using 'ringraziare' (to thank) — more elaborate

Mini Dialogue

— Ecco il suo codice di ricarica. — Grazie mille! Ha fatto molto presto. — Di niente. È il mio lavoro. — Tutti dovrebbero essere così efficienti!

— Here is your top-up code. — Thank you very much! You were very quick. — Don't mention it. It's my job. — Everyone should be this efficient!

Cultural Note

Italians express thanks enthusiastically and the recipient will typically respond with 'prego' (you're welcome), 'di niente' (it's nothing), or 'si figuri' (formal — don't mention it). A warm exchange of thanks and acknowledgement is a micro-ritual that defines the quality of Italian social interaction.