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Andreean Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Opposite meaning?

"I couldn't agree more with you" does this sentence reflect very agree? and "I couldn't agree anymore with you" and this sentence reflects disagree? Thanks before
  

Top answer

andreean "I couldn't agree more with you" I agree to the maximum amount possible. It is not possible to agree to any greater extent. ) andreean I couldn't agree anymore with you Not idiomatic.

  • andreean "I couldn't agree more with you" I agree to the maximum amount possible.
  • It is not possible to agree to any greater extent.
  • ) andreean I couldn't agree anymore with you Not idiomatic.
  • It's: I don't agree with you anymore.
  • It means that I used to agree with you in the past, but I have changed my mind, and now I do not agree with you.
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4 Answers
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andreean"I couldn't agree more with you"
I agree to the maximum amount possible. It is not possible to agree to any greater extent. (I agree very strongly with you.)
andreeanI couldn't agree anymore with you
Not idiomatic. It's: I don't agree with you anymore. It means that I used to agree with you in the past, b
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Thank you CalifJim. Now I understand. Emotion: smile
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I'm curious as to whether 'reflect' is a good word to choose in op's post.

"I couldn't agree more with you" does this sentence reflect very agree? and "I couldn't agree anymore with you" and this sentence reflects disagree?


Thanks for your help
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Anonymousreflect
reflect is OK, but it should be Does this sentence reflect strong agreement?

CJ

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