Guide · 3 min read
How to not sound rude in messages.
You weren't rude. You were in a hurry. But the person on the other side only sees the text — and short messages default to cold. Here's how to fix that without sliding into fake friendliness.
Why short texts read as rude
In person, tone is carried by voice, face, and pacing. In text, tone is carried by length, punctuation, and word choice. Remove those signals and a neutral sentence defaults to negative — especially if the reader is already stressed.
The six phrases that quietly sound rude
- "ok." — the period reads as annoyed.
- "fine." — universally interpreted as not fine.
- "k" — feels dismissive.
- "we need to talk" — creates panic even when you don't mean it to.
- "as I said before" — reads as scolding.
- "per my last message" — the email equivalent of a sigh.
Three small rewrites that change everything
Add one word of context.
can't today
Aftercan't today — stuck with work stuff. raincheck?
Swap the period for something softer.
ok.
Afterok — sounds good
Open with warmth, then deliver the point.
no i wont do that
AfterI hear you, but that's not something I can take on — happy to figure out another way.
When "rude" is actually fine
If the other person has been pushy, dismissive, or crossed a line, a short and direct message is not rude. It's a boundary. Don't over-soften just to avoid discomfort — clear is kind.