Comment by echelon_musk 8 hours ago There's no dialect of English in which this is correct. 4 comments echelon_musk Reply tom_ 7 hours ago That could be true, but I don't think I'd bet on it myself. antonvs 7 hours ago Good call. The original comment is making fun of the incorrect double negative. “Without no way” means there is a way. tom_ 4 hours ago Many kinds of double negative are acceptable in many English dialects, and are interpreted as emphasis. The negatives add, rather than multiply. (Though I admit I myself don't speak such a dialect, hence the equivocation.) badc0ffee 6 hours ago Ain't no way.
tom_ 7 hours ago That could be true, but I don't think I'd bet on it myself. antonvs 7 hours ago Good call. The original comment is making fun of the incorrect double negative. “Without no way” means there is a way. tom_ 4 hours ago Many kinds of double negative are acceptable in many English dialects, and are interpreted as emphasis. The negatives add, rather than multiply. (Though I admit I myself don't speak such a dialect, hence the equivocation.)
antonvs 7 hours ago Good call. The original comment is making fun of the incorrect double negative. “Without no way” means there is a way. tom_ 4 hours ago Many kinds of double negative are acceptable in many English dialects, and are interpreted as emphasis. The negatives add, rather than multiply. (Though I admit I myself don't speak such a dialect, hence the equivocation.)
tom_ 4 hours ago Many kinds of double negative are acceptable in many English dialects, and are interpreted as emphasis. The negatives add, rather than multiply. (Though I admit I myself don't speak such a dialect, hence the equivocation.)
That could be true, but I don't think I'd bet on it myself.
Good call. The original comment is making fun of the incorrect double negative. “Without no way” means there is a way.
Many kinds of double negative are acceptable in many English dialects, and are interpreted as emphasis. The negatives add, rather than multiply. (Though I admit I myself don't speak such a dialect, hence the equivocation.)
Ain't no way.