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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?
22 dec. 2009 08:30
Antwoorden · 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)
23 december 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.'
22 december 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."
22 december 2009
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
linky
Taalvaardigheden
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels, Frans, Duits, Italiaans, Koreaans, Portugees
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels, Frans, Duits, Italiaans
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