Be sure that you know what you are trying to say if you use two negative words
in a sentence. In English, two negatives cancel each other out rather than double
the negative force of your sentence. 'I didn't see no one' is a rather strange
way of saying that you saw someone, rather than an emphatic way of saying that
you saw no one.
It is also wrong to say something like 'There wasn't hardly anyone there';
hardly and scarcely should not be used with negatives. Similarly,
the verb miss already has a negative meaning, and doesn't need to have
a negative added: say `I miss seeing her', not `I miss not seeing her'.