| I'd rather not talk about it. |
| I'm afraid the position we're offering is a rather junior one, though. |
| I'd rather not, if it's all the same. |
| In fact, he's doing rather well since your daughter left him. |
| Rather than putting, "[over her/him]," all over the place, double dashes surround speeches that overlap (partially or fully) the preceding speech. |
| I'd rather tell Mom and Dad myself. |
| I'm sorry but my client's costs have risen rather sharply. |
| Anyway, I'd rather be here with you. |
| Wouldn't you rather go to the monster truck rally with your girlfriend? |
| It's rather empty at this hour in the afternoon. |
| Now, would you rather that the Feds put him away or us? |
| Sometimes you'd just rather stay at home. |
| I'd rather die than let that happen. |
| I'd rather stand. |
| [disappointed, rather cold] Goodbye. |
| [waving him off] I'd rather not talk about this. |
| I'd rather not say. |
| Not necessarily the physical events themselves, but rather the thoughts and feelings surrounding them. |
| Fields would say I'd rather be here then in Philadelphia. |
| The dining area is rather busy. |
| You have a rather irritating method of expressing yourself. |
| I'd rather not say too much about things we can't prove yet. |
| There's no one we'd rather have. |
| I'd rather stand on it than eat it. |