more than you can help

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jasonlulu_2000

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I came across the following sentence while reading:

Don't cough more than you can help.

I cannot make any sense of it. Can you help me to understand this sentence?

Thanks

Jason
 
I came across the following sentence while reading:

Don't cough more than you can help.

I cannot make any sense of it. Can you help me to understand this sentence?

Thanks

Jason
Do not cough in excess of your ability to control the coughing. This is a fairly common form - "Do not spend any more than you can help". The "you can help" part speaks to your ability to stop or control something.
 
It does make you wonder who spends time coughing optionally.
 
People who do so rhetorically?
 
It does seem strange when worded this way. I would expect "Don't cough if you can help it", meaning "Don't cough if you can possibly avoiding doing so".
 
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