Is it "you're welcome" or "you're welcomed"??

Question:I'm writing a book and I can't find it in any dictionary.

Answers:
If it's in response to "thank you", then it'd be "you're welcome".

"Welcomed" would better used with a past tense, e.g. "you have/had been welcomed".

You're welcome ;-)
I've always thought it was "...you're welcome"
it's "you're welcome"
you're welcome
it's "you're welcome"
welcome
you're welcome
You're welcome
as in "thank you.",
"you're welcome."
welcome if you are acknowledging appreciation of a kindness and welcomed if you are greeting someone to your home..he welcomed her home and and he said you are welcome in response to her thanking him for opening the garage door
You're welcome
depends on usage.
thank u then reply u're welcome or u're welcome to join
u're welcomed to join our dinner party.
hope it helps
you're welcome.
If you're replying to a 'thank you', then it's 'you're welcome.
It's "you're welcome," short for "you are welcome."

It's the present tense.

"You are welcomed" would have a different meaning.
The easy way to remember is to think about when it was used.
Tense deals with time,when it occurred.
You're welcome,is present tense or the present time.
You're welcomed,is past tense or in the past.The sentence is incomplete without a reference to time.
It would be proper to say ,"Have you been welcomed?"(Past tense).
"Do you feel welcome?"(Present Tense).

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