Turning a statement into a question by suffixing it with "yeah?"

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Today, I had to endure a manager reading me a verbal warning for my attendance after contracting the flu. That's an entirely separate rant, this one is about the way he read out a fact and prompted a response from me by adding "yeah?" to the end of the sentence, thus turning it into a question. :mad: Something like "OK, you're average absense for the past 26 weeks is 5%, which is over the 3% review level. yeah?"

After a few of these, I pulled a Jack Bauer in courtroom in s7ep1, and simply replied "I'm sorry, I didn't hear a question." The other manager scribing the conversation smirked :D

Anyone else suffered this? Or do you do it yourself? :mad: :p
 
Hardly bad times, verbal warning is gone after 8 weeks. It's a ridiculous system though: most companies review attendance when there's patterns of absence, or just a lot of it, or when there's suspicion that they weren't really sick. No, here there's 2 measurements, occasions of absence, and the %age. It's based over 26 weeks, I had 2 occasions, one back in august missed 1 shift, and the flu a couple of weeks ago, missing 3 shifts (saturday, monday, tuesday). Because I work very few hours per week, the %age skyrockets easily(%age of the hours you work in the last 26 weeks for which you were absent is 3% threshold).

I've had stretches of a year or 18 months at a time without an absence, but because I missed a shift last august, and then contracted the flu this month, I get a warning. FML :p

Anyway, I could deal with that, it didn't really bother me to much extent, but the constant question-when-there-wasn't-a-question really dug at me :mad:
 
They have to say it for the record and check you don't disagree with why you're getting a bollocking.

Yeah? after the accusations would seem to be your managers way of doing that.
 
Can't say I find it much of an issue, makes it a little less formal than saying 'is that correct' after every statement.
 
They have to say it for the record and check you don't disagree with why you're getting a bollocking.

Yeah? after the accusations would seem to be your managers way of doing that.

No, there's set points for me to speak in the meeting script, this was literally every point.

"You're percentage is 5%, yeah?"
"umhmm"
"That's over the 3% review level, yeah?"
<-- What can I say here? 3 is infact bigger than 5, and thus I'm under the review level? :rolleyes:
 
Can't say I find it much of an issue, makes it a little less formal than saying 'is that correct' after every statement.

He didn't need to suffix the sentence with anything, he was telling me information in bullet points. It's just a bad habbit, nothing to do with having to do it to ensure I know why I'm warned etc or anything like that.
 
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