mightn't

English

Etymology

might + -n't

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈmaɪt.n̩t/, /ˈmaɪʔ.n̩t/

Verb

mightn't

  1. (Britain) might not (negative auxiliary[1])
    • 1931, Mary Hunter Austin, Starry Adventure (page 274)
      Her driver was new to the country; he mightn't be prepared for the leaping of the yellow water down dry arroyos, swift as the pouncings of a cat, or the snake-like slidings of tons of loosened rock and clay from the steep potreros []
    • 1963, Perry Mason, The Case of the Greek Goddess (Television Season 6, Episode 25)
      “But, mightn’t there have been something unusual about the Stimatis contract itself?” [Perry Mason cross-examining Roger Correll.]
    • 1974, Mario Vargas Llosa, Conversation in the Cathedral: A Novel‎, Harper & Row (First Rayo Edition, 2005), page 275:
      "But at night she would still think the same thing: mightn't it be that he wouldn't come to see her anymore?"

Translations

See also

  • Appendix:English modal verbs
  • Appendix:English tag questions

References

  1. Arnold M. Zwicky and Geoffrey K. Pullum, Cliticization vs. Inflection: English n’t, Language 59 (3), 1983, pp. 502-513
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