ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
"Y'all" is still omnipresent in the South. I'm glad too. Folks that use "y'all" correctly are home folks.
Is there an incorrect way to use y'all? [&:]
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
"Y'all" is still omnipresent in the South. I'm glad too. Folks that use "y'all" correctly are home folks.
ORIGINAL: obvert
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
"Y'all" is still omnipresent in the South. I'm glad too. Folks that use "y'all" correctly are home folks.
Is there an incorrect way to use y'all? [&:]
American: youzORIGINAL: BillBrown
And I thought the plural of you was youse. [;)]
ORIGINAL: Lecivius
I'm not sure an Indian division would do so well in The Great White North.
ORIGINAL: obvert
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
"Y'all" is still omnipresent in the South. I'm glad too. Folks that use "y'all" correctly are home folks.
Is there an incorrect way to use y'all? [&:]
ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58
ORIGINAL: obvert
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
"Y'all" is still omnipresent in the South. I'm glad too. Folks that use "y'all" correctly are home folks.
Is there an incorrect way to use y'all? [&:]
It's one of the biggest debates in southern dialect-land. Traditionalists insist it is, and must only be, the second-person plural pronoun which formal English lacks. (The formal is "you", same as the singular, a fact that amuses my Spanish ESL students to no end.) In formal English one must add hand gestures or something to include the plural group in the "you", and that doesn't work in written English. So "y'all" (or ya'll" as it's sometimes, inexplicably, spelled) is a contraction of "you all" which indicates plurality and second-person state.
But. The inevitable but. Some, nay multitudes, insist on using it in singular in place of "you." To be homey, or "more" southern, or something. To your friend on the couch, "Ya'll ready to go to the movie?" You see this in movies and on TV a lot, put there by non-southern writers I presume. But I've seen it grow my whole life in the actual south too. I don't know if it stratifies by education or region or something else, but it's a thing.
ORIGINAL: BillBrown
And I thought the plural of you was youse. [;)]
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
I've heard it said that southerners will sometimes use "y'all" when referring to a single person, but I've never heard it done. Ever. It's always used in the plural.
ORIGINAL: Encircled
I was on the radio recently (managed to win a kitchen!) and I didn't realise how Northern I sound.
Not Manc, or scouse, but proper Northern!


ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58
You need to get out more, or go to the northern south. Try Virginia. Singular y'alls thick as fleas. [:)]
...