

The implied meaning is “he can hardly wait for the game to begin,” (and this would be the correct way to write this sentence too!) The literal meaning is “he can wait for the game.” Some sneaky double negatives. Take, for example, the sentence: He can’t hardly wait for the game to begin. Negative adverbs are words like barely, seldom, hardly, rarely, and scarcely. Even though they don’t have “no,” they still have a negative connotation. Negative adverbs are sneaky negative modifiers because they aren’t “no” words. Write smarter with our thesaurus-powered Grammar Coach™! Get spelling help, synonyms suggestions, grammar check and more! Sign up now! What is a negative adverb? How would you rewrite the sentence: I didn’t want to live nowhere else? (Hint: The modifier is no again.)

Here are some examples of ways to get rid of negative nouns. Negative nouns are words such as nowhere, nothing, nobody, and no one. If you use a negative noun and a negative verb, you have a double negative.
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Here’s how to recognize and side step them. It’s easy to fall into a double-negative trap. You’ll write a stronger sentence when you put statements in a positive form. So, when you use a double negative it ends up being the exact opposite of what you mean.

That’s because double negatives cancel each other out and make a positive. Sentences with double negatives are not grammatically correct. A double negativeis when two negative words or constructions are used within a single clause.
