cannot dance

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keannu

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What is the difference between "cannot" and "can't"? I think "cannot" is more emphasizing than "can't" as it is more loosened.

gzg54-a3
ex)I can dance very well, but she cannot(can't) dance very well.
 
See these similar threads, which I found by putting can not/cannot in the Google Custom Search box at the top of the page.

Rover
 
You wouldn't use can't in a formal text.
 
I didn't mean cannot/can not, which are about "inability vs refraining", but cannot/can't, and as you said "can't" is informal while "cannot" is formal, but the two mean the same thing of "inability". If I am wrong, please let me know.
 
Can't is simply the contracted form of cannot. They both mean exactly the same thing. As Tdol said, you would not use can't in a formal text.
 
I think "cannot" is more emphasizing than "can't" as it is more loosened.

I don't think this is greatly the case- you can't use can't in some contexts, but where there is a choice, there isn't much difference.
 
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