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  • wont vs. wouldnt - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Contrary to what you seem to think, wouldn't and won't are almost never interchangeable The simple negative won't is used for future negative actions or for refusals I won't go to the store tomorrow if it's raining (Future negative ) I won't go to the dance with you (Refusal ) The negative wouldn't is used for counterfactual statements, and for future statements embedded in a past-tense
  • word usage - Is this the right way to use wouldnt? - English . . .
    Wouldn't is indeed short for would not, as in Would you not want… It is simply a rhetorical question, meant to express Of course you want extra protection
  • What is the exact meaning of I wouldnt have it any other way?
    I wouldn't have it any other way If, instead, we were to emphasize the word "have" I wouldn't have it any other way it could be interpreted as "there is no other way that I can have this " But if that is indeed what the people on social media are trying to say, there are better ways to say it! For example, It's the only way I can have this
  • Whats the difference between wont and wouldnt?
    2 To my ear "I won't" is unconditional "I wouldn't" implies the possibility of unspoken implied conditions: I wouldn't (if such and such conditions are upheld ) I won't is a step closer to I can't Wouldn't is a potential step in the direction of weasel words
  • What does it mean when you say What I wouldnt give to be there?
    It's a less dramatic version of the doubtless hyperbolic "I'd give my right arm [ hand] to be there " (See, for example, Cambridge Dictionary) The implication is that you'd give up many of your prized possessions comforts in return for being there (etc) "What [is there that] I wouldn't give [up] to be able to ?" [implication: the list of what I wouldn't give up in exchange is small
  • sentence - I am not sure vs I wouldnt be so sure - English Language . . .
    What is the difference between these two sentences? Do they have the same meaning? It would be better if you provide example sentences I am not sure I wouldn't be so sure
  • I wouldnt really recommend it in British vs American English
    To convey interpretation #2, I would expect that a speaker in either would have to provide a little more context - for example, to explicitly say: "One could do X One could also do Y, but I wouldn't really recommend that you do it " Is interpretation #2 common in British English?
  • Why do you need to in this sentence? (I wouldnt go so far as to say . . .
    Example sentence: I wouldn't go so far as to say that computers will replace teachers in the near future Why do you need quot;to quot; in this sentence?
  • Dont Wont Wouldnt want to [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
    Don't means do not, won't means will not, and wouldn't means would not I don't want to do X This per se means you currently don't want to do it; however, for a native speaker, if X is defined to be a future event, it can mean "would not" (e g I don't want to do X even if I get the chance) However, for a native speaker, a more natural-sounding way to say this would be "I don't think I'll
  • What’s the origin and history of the phrase “ten foot pole”?
    Before the 20th century, the pole was a common measuring device and evidence suggests that the figure ten-foot was a conveniently rounded number; the expression is, essentially, a hyperbolic statement, and was probably the inspiration for the more recent British idiom wouldn't touch sth with a barge pole (1877)





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