says…
Don't you know it ?
Don't you know it? Don't you know it?
Words and sentences
don't
-
- do not (negative auxiliary)
- does not
- Used before an emphatic negative subject.
you know it
Indicates agreement, approval, encouragement.
know
-
- To perceive the truth or factuality of; to be certain of; to be certain that.
- To be or become aware or cognizant.
- To be aware of; to be cognizant of.
- (obsolete) To be acquainted (with another person).
- To be acquainted or familiar with; to have encountered.
- To be acquainted or familiar with; to have encountered.
- To experience.
- To understand or have a grasp of through experience or study.
- To be able to distinguish, to discern, particularly by contrast or comparison; to recognize the nature of.
- To recognize as the same (as someone or something previously encountered) after an absence or change.
- To have knowledge; to have information, be informed.
- To be able to play or perform (a song or other piece of music).
- To have indexed and have information about within one's database.
- To maintain (a belief, a position) subject to a given philosophical definition of knowledge; to hold a justified true belief.
it
-
- The third-person singular neuter personal pronoun used to refer to an inanimate object, abstract entity, or non-human living thing.
- A third-person singular personal pronoun used to refer to a baby or child, especially of unknown gender.
- (obsolete) An affectionate third-person singular personal pronoun.
- A third-person singular personal pronoun used to refer to an animate referent who is transgender or non-binary.
- Used to refer to someone being identified, often on the phone, but not limited to this situation.
- The impersonal pronoun, used without referent as the subject of an impersonal verb or statement (known as the dummy pronoun, dummy it or weather it).
- The impersonal pronoun, used without referent, or with unstated but contextually implied referent, in various short idioms or expressions.
- The impersonal pronoun, used without referent, or with unstated but contextually implied referent, in various short idioms or expressions.
- The impersonal pronoun, used without referent, or with unstated but contextually implied referent, in various short idioms or expressions.
- Sex appeal, especially that which goes beyond physical appearance.
- The impersonal pronoun, used as a placeholder for a delayed subject, or less commonly, object; known as the dummy pronoun (according to some definitions), anticipatory it or, more formally in linguistics, a syntactic expletive. The delayed subject is commonly a to-infinitive, a gerund, or a noun clause introduced by a subordinating conjunction.
- All or the end; something after which there is no more.
- (obsolete) Followed by an omitted and understood relative pronoun: That which; what.
you
-
- The people spoken, or written to, as an object.
- (colloquial) (To) yourselves, (to) yourself.
- The person spoken to or written to, as an object. (Replacing thee; originally as a mark of respect.)
- The people spoken to or written to, as a subject. (Replacing ye.)
- The person spoken to or written to, as a subject. (Originally as a mark of respect.)
- (colloquial) A person's favorite sports team.
- Anyone, one; an unspecified individual or group of individuals (as subject or object).