{{Short description|Grammatical construction in the English language}} {{English grammar}} {{use mdy dates|date=December 2018}} {{For|other uses of the word|Not (disambiguation)}} {{refimprove|date=January 2014}} '''... Not!''' is a grammatical construction in the English language used as a function word to make negative a group of words or a word.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/not |title = Definition of NOT}}</ref> It became a sardonic catchphrase in North America and elsewhere in the 1990s. A declarative statement is made, followed by a pause, and then an emphatic "not!" adverb is postfixed. The result is a surprise negation of the original declarative statement.
According to the above, the phrase, "He is a nice guy... not!" is synonymous to "He is not a nice guy". Whereas the latter structure is a neutral observation, the former expresses rather an annoyance, and is most often used jocularly.
One of the earliest uses was in the ''Princeton Tiger'' (March 30, 1893) 103: "An Historical Parallel-- Not." In 1905, it was used in the comic strip ''Dream of the Rarebit Fiend'' by Winsor McCay. A 1918 instance was "I am darn sorry not to be able to help you out with the News Letter, but in me you have a fund of information—NOT."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Telluride|date=10 April 1918|title=Letter from W. D. Whitney, Yale Reserve Officers' Training Corps, New Haven, Conn., March 13, 1918.|url=https://www.tellurideassociation.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/04_8_1918_April.pdf|journal=Telluride News Letter|volume=4|issue=8 |pages=12|access-date=27 June 2019}}</ref>
Popularized in North America in the 1990s by the ''Saturday Night Live'' sketch and subsequent film ''Wayne's World,''<ref>{{cite journal|author=Jesse T. Sheidlower|author2=Jonathan E. Lighter|title=A Recent Coinage (Not!)|journal=American Speech|volume=68|number=2|date=Summer 1993|pages=213–218|doi=10.2307/455678|jstor=455678}}</ref> "not" was selected as the 1992 Word of the Year by the American Dialect Society.
The "Not!" catchphrase was the basis of a scene in the 2006 film ''Borat'', in which a lecturer in humour attempted to explain the grammatical construction to Borat Sagdiyev with limited success.
==See also== *Privative, a particle that inverts the meaning of the word stem to which it is affixed.
==Notes== {{reflist}}
==External links== *[https://web.archive.org/web/20120112135806/http://alt-usage-english.org/excerpts/fxpostfi.html Postfix Not! in English] *{{cite web |date=January 13, 1993 |url=http://www.americandialect.org/index.php/amerdial/1992_words_of_the_year/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060615064316/http://www.americandialect.org/index.php/amerdial/1992_words_of_the_year/|url-status=dead|archive-date=June 15, 2006|publisher=American Dialect Society|title=1992 Words of the Year}} *{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/03/08/magazine/on-language-not.html|title=On Language; Not!|date=March 8, 1992|last=Safire|first=William|author-link=William Safire|newspaper=The New York Times Magazine|page=20}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Not}} Category:1990s slang Category:English grammar Category:Saturday Night Live catchphrases Category:1890s quotations Category:1992 quotations Category:Quotations from television
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