AI-translated archive post

Academic English #52. doesn

New Hair Institute · 김진오의 뉴헤어 프로젝트 · August 26, 2025

In English, “doesn’t agree with me” does not simply mean “our opinions do not match.” In everyday conversation, it is also often used when food, medicine, or the environment does n...

AI translation notice

This page is an English translation of a Korean Naver Blog archive entry. For exact wording and source context, verify against the Korean archive original and the original Naver post.

Clinic: New Hair Institute

Original post date: August 26, 2025

Translated at: April 25, 2026 at 8:26 AM

Medical note: This translation does not guarantee medical accuracy or suitability for treatment decisions.

In English, “doesn’t agree with me” does not simply mean “our opinions do not match.”

In everyday conversation, it is also often used when food, medicine, or the environment does not suit your body.

In other words, it conveys a nuance similar to the Korean expression “doesn’t suit me” or “doesn’t work well with me.”

In academic or formal settings, it can also be used to express that a particular treatment, data set, or result does not align with one’s research.

Academic English #52. doesn image 1

3 example sentences for everyday conversation

  • Spicy food doesn’t agree with me.

  • Milk doesn’t agree with me.

  • ​Hot weather doesn’t agree with me.

3 example sentences for academic/professional English

  • This medication doesn’t agree with certain patient groups.

  • The findings don’t agree with my hypothesis.

  • The data doesn’t agree with the previous literature.

Continue browsing

Keep exploring this clinic's public source trail

Return to the source archive for more translated posts, or open the Korean clinic profile to compare other public channels.