Comment by antonvs
10 hours ago
Good call. The original comment is making fun of the incorrect double negative. “Without no way” means there is a way.
10 hours ago
Good call. The original comment is making fun of the incorrect double negative. “Without no way” means there is a way.
Shakespeare himself uses the double negative for emphasis, FFS. It never was, nor never will be incorrect.
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.)