Every workplace has its own dialect. It’s a mix of jargon, politeness, pressure, and plausible deniability, delivered through Slack messages and calendar invites. Most of it sounds professional. A lot of it is doing emotional gymnastics.
Fluency in corporate language is about understanding the subtext so you can respond appropriately. Because in modern offices, meaning can often get buried under tone, cliches, and “just checking in” emails.
Here’s a plain-English translation of today’s most common workplace phrases — including a few newer ones that have entered the chat.
What your coworkers say vs. what they actually mean
“Circling back”
I asked you already and I’m losing patience.
“Just flagging this”
You ignored me the first time.
“I don’t have the bandwidth”
This is not my priority, and I’m not pretending it is.
“Let’s sync”
This will be a meeting that could have been a message.
“Can you take a first pass?”
I don’t want to do this, but I want credit later.
“Quick question”
It will not be quick.
“We need to align”
Someone disagrees, and we’re about to talk it to death.
“Per my last message”
Please read all the words. Please. I am begging.
“Putting this on your radar”
You’re now responsible, whether you like it or not.
“That’s a great callout”
You identified a problem I don’t want to fix.
“We need to move faster”
You are the bottleneck.
“We’ll revisit”
We absolutely will not, because the answer is no.
“Thanks for your patience”
You had no choice.
“As discussed”
You already agreed to this. Don’t pretend you didn’t.
“Let’s stay solution-oriented”
Stop criticizing leadership.
“For visibility”
I’m looping in power.
“Happy to chat”
I am not happy, but I am available.
“Thoughts?”
Please validate this idea.
“Can you socialize this?”
Go convince everyone else so I don’t have to.
“That’s above my pay grade”
I’m not touching this.
“This will be a heavy lift”
This will be painful and under-resourced.
“Let’s level-set”
You’re not meeting expectations on this project.
The Newer Entries
“Just adding context”
You’re missing the point.
“Low-key concerned”
I am actually very concerned.
“This is giving…”
I don’t like the vibe and you know why.
“Let’s not boil the ocean”
You’re doing too much.
“I want to be respectful of time”
Please stop talking.
“We’ll take this as a follow-up”
This conversation is over.
“Let’s be mindful”
Someone crossed a line.
“Hard stop at the top of the hour”
I am leaving whether we’re done or not.
“Let’s pressure-test this”
I don’t think this will hold up.
“👀”
I saw this and have opinions.
“+1”
I agree, but don’t want responsibility.


Dr. Gleb Tsipursky – The Office Whisperer
Nirit Cohen – WorkFutures
Angela Howard – Culture Expert
Drew Jones – Design & Innovation
Jonathan Price – CRE & Flex Expert














