The article examines implicit and explicit forms of agreement and denial from a linguocultural perspective. The study explores direct and indirect mechanisms of expressing agreement and refusal across languages, focusing on their pragmatic and cultural foundations. Drawing on speech act theory, implicature, and discourse analysis, the research identifies communicative strategies, politeness norms, and national-cultural patterns of speech behavior. Explicit forms are analyzed as grammatically and lexically marked expressions, while implicit forms are interpreted through contextual cues, presuppositions, and cultural codes. The findings demonstrate that agreement and denial are not merely linguistic categories but culturally embedded communicative practices shaped by social values and interactional conventions.