Sentence examples for agree not to let from inspiring English sources

The phrase "agree not to let" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a mutual understanding or commitment to prevent something from happening.
Example: "We both agree not to let personal issues interfere with our professional relationship."
Alternatives: "consent to refrain from" or "promise not to allow".

Exact(3)

Parents should also formally agree not to let their childcare responsibilities interfere with their ability to do the job.

You can't say, "By buying this book, you agree to vote for Donald Trump," or "You agree not to let black people or Jews or women read it".

The estimates coupled with assorted reserves — the undisclosed limit below which auction houses contractually agree not to let consigned works go — were so high that the session resembled a lottery, with a touch of Russian roulette.

Similar(54)

(He agreed not to let homeless people use his apartment anymore).

But since 1989, Britain and Argentina have agreed not to let this dispute prejudice otherwise normal relations, and have co-operated on matters such as oil exploration and fisheries.

On January 12th Katsuya Okada, Japan's foreign minister, and Hillary Clinton, America's secretary of state, agreed not to let the dispute stop them discussing other ways to bolster their military alliance.

When I went in I was like: 'I'll do whatever I have to do to be in the this movie.'" At the audition in New York the casting director agreed not to let on to "Marty" that the next actor up was an American.

While she told Enrico Fermi, they agreed not to let Walter Zinn know, for fear that he would insist that she leave the reactor building.

Let's agree not to talk about Logan – I can't really defend her booking here.

Let's agree not to remind California what it used to take for granted, that novellas, because of their length, can often be more handily adapted than novels into movies.

In the coming debate about universal access to more affordable health care, let's agree not to use the phrase "perverse incentives," which you invoke to describe the current fee-for-service system of "paying physicians and hospitals for each patient visit".

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