Englishfor English speakers
let's
verb
—
Used to form the hortative of verbs, equivalent of the first-person plural imperative in some other languages.
—
let us; forming first-person plural imperative
not
Adverb
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"Not" makes the verb of a sentence have the opposite meaning.
I was not there.
I am not fat!
not
Conjunction
—
The item before "not" is more correct or better than the item after "not".
I wanted tea, not coffee!
Meaning: I wanted tea. I did not want coffee.
It's stupid, not funny.
Meaning: It is stupid. It is not funny.
not
Interjection
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Used to indicate the sentence before is sarcastic or ironic. This means that the sentence has the opposite meaning.
I like doing lots of boring homework. Not!
Meaning: I do not like doing lots of boring homework.
argue
Verb
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If you argue with someone, you debate, disagree or talk about your differing ideas.
—
If you argue with someone, you have an argument with them.