I don’t think so

I don’t agree with what was just stated, either by myself or by someone else. Generally pronounced with a marked emphasis on think, this twentieth-century expression started out as I don’t think, with the emphasis on don’t, in the nineteenth century. Dickens had it in Pickwick Papers (1837): “‘Amiably disposed . . . , 
‘I don’t think,’ resumed Mr. Weller, in a tone of moral reproof.” A slangy one-word synonym used in the same way is not, which became very popular from the late 1980s on. It actually originated a century or so earlier; J. E. Lighter cites the Princeton Tiger of March 30, 1893: “An Historical Parallel—Not.” It reappeared on the tele- vision show Saturday Night Live and in the film Wayne’s World (1992), but may again be dying out.

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