English, asked by christythomas374, 4 months ago

1."I never say,' I can't do that 'I just say, "I having worked it out yet ".how do you differentiate these two ways of answering​

Answers

Answered by hansitha6
2

Explanation:

I never say I can't do that

2.i having work it out yet

Answered by anuradhadevi175100
2

Answer:

In British English, it is stretching a point to say that ‘I didn't say that’ refers to one specific past occasion while ‘I never said that’ refers to any previous occasion. It can mean that, but it is a very literal interpretation of the words and is NOT the difference that comes to mind first.

To me, the two mean the same: the difference is when I would use them.

‘I didn't say that’ is a simple negation with no emotional force at all.

‘I never said that!’ practically requires an exclamation mark: it's a sentence I would use only when defending myself in a very heated way. There is something almost childlike in the level of vehemence.

There are lots of expressions, such as ‘Well I never!’, ‘Ooh, you never did!”, also slightly childlike, which contain similar levels of emotion. The ”never” used in all these cases is very much an intensifier.

Explanation:

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