(there are) no two ways about it American spoken language noun informal
She is the one deciding who is going to be next, there are no two ways about it.
Even when you don't like it, you still have to do it for a living. There are no two ways about it
Time keeps passing.
Meaning absolutely certain or without a doubt
Difficult to choose between two alternatives.
White lie
To tell someone the truth about something that they had not understood or received false information
We need to conjugate tense of the idiom.
Although she didn't want to, she had to do it. There were no two ways about it.
If she wants to change her answer in the last moment, she won't be able to do that. There will be no two ways about it.
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This idiom is believed to become popular in the early 1800s in America, and it was written by Dickens in his American Notes (1842): "They're pretty nigh full... and no two ways about it."