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linky
I don't buy that.I'm not sure the meaning
Can you tell me the meaning and give an example?
Dec 22, 2009 8:30 AM
Answers · 3
1
Conversely, the whole 'buying' metaphor is, of course, related to the notion of someone trying to sell you something. Consider the following conversation:
STUDENT: "I was too busy."
TEACHER: "What are you trying to sell me? That you couldn't find the time to do your homework!?"
STUDENT: "Yeah, pretty much."
TEACHER: "Well, I'm not buying it!"
'Pitching' is also popular, like:
"What are you trying to pitch here?" (from sales pitch, of course)
December 23, 2009
I agree with Mark Kramer.
'Not buy something' is an idiom. It means not accept something (to be true).
'You may think so, but I don't buy it.'
'The police wouldn't buy his story.'
December 22, 2009
"Not buying something" means you're not believing it; you're not accepting it as true. Like:
"He said he can speak ten languages, but I'm not buying [it]."
You can drop "it" if you want.
Or,
"He said he can speak ten languages, but I don't buy that."
P.S. You can usually also use "buy" along with "into," like:
"I'm not buying into the whole the-suspect-just-fell routine."
December 22, 2009
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linky
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, German, Italian, Korean, Portuguese
Learning Language
English, French, German, Italian
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