News1 min ago
No way, Jose
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I based my response on the material about the phrase as it appears in The Oxford English Dictionary - generally regarded as the 'bible' in matters of etymology and historical word/phrase-development. The 1977 example - the first to be recorded in UK - was in a newspaper report of a speech given by a union official who claimed that there was 'no way' there would be a strike that would affect old people. Clearly, it might have been around in speech prior to 1977, but not for long without a showing in writing, I suspect.
It would be interesting to hear what actual evidence you have for believing the 'Jos�' version predates 'Only Fools', too.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'northern', but surely some Liverpudlian accused - when asked by the prosecutor: "It was at this point, was it not, that you removed Mr Jones's wallet?" - would have replied: "No way!" In which case, the phrase would have appeared in written court records. Why weren't crowds at Old Trafford and St James's Park yelling: "No way, ref!" in which case it would probably have appeared in newspaper match reports.
In any case, it seems you now agree that the two-word version of the phrase first appeared in the USA, which was my main point in the first place. The earliest evidence of it remains there in the early 70s, which is also what I claimed, thus answering the 'where' and 'when' elements of the question.
Moving on, above, to the 'Jos�' version, I did not claim I had evidence, but merely said I wouldn't be surprised if the 'Only Fools' scriptwriter had invented it. I still wouldn't.