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Evo25 Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

no/nope/non/not

no/nope/non/not
i
always confused when i should use which one in different condition.
can someone explain to me?
thanks.
  

Top answer

The short answer: No is mostly an adjective: no peanuts. Not is an adverb: not happy. Nope is slang for no when it is a stand-alone adverb denying or refusing something: Are you happy?

  • The short answer: No is mostly an adjective: no peanuts.
  • Not is an adverb: not happy.
  • Nope is slang for no when it is a stand-alone adverb denying or refusing something: Are you happy?
  • Nope .
  • Non- is a prefix which does not stand alone; it is part of other words: nonviolent, nonpareil.
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4 Answers
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.
The short answer:

No is mostly an adjective: no peanuts.
Not is an adverb: not happy.
Nope is slang for no when it is a stand-alone adverb denying or refusing something: Are you happy? Nope.
Non- is a prefix which does not stand alone; it is part of other words: nonv
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can explain further.
thanks.
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nope is usually rude or used by those people who knows each othere well(friends)
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Nope can be a more firm denial than a simple no. "Did you take those cookies, Anna?" "Nope."

It is used almost exclusively in casual conversation. It would be odd to say "nope" in a business meeting, or in class, but not wrong or insulting to anyone.

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