You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
Yinz wanna get some wings and then attend a Trump rally?
Usually I see it spelled "yins," because plurals end in "s" and that's what that word is doing, but being dialectal I guess there really is no standard per se.
Yinz wanna get some wings and then attend a Trump rally?
Usually I see it spelled "yins," because plurals end in "s" and that's what that word is doing, but being dialectal I guess there really is no standard per se.
"Youse" is a curious thing. It's not necessarily plural and more often than not it indicates a particular case. Not sure how to describe it.
There are two forms that are "youse": the "Commonwealth" (for lack of a better word, given how Wiktionary defines its distribution) 2nd-person-plural "yous" and the AAVE 2nd-person-genitive "you'se"
Again, there's also singular "youse," which is sort of halfway between the two and is mainly a Northeast thing, particularly in old Italian communities (like the one in South Philly) for some reason. Even then, I think there's a grammatical gap being filled in how there's a difference in subject-object relationship between "you" or "ya" and "youse."
Again, there's also singular "youse," which is sort of halfway between the two and is mainly a Northeast thing, particularly in old Italian communities (like the one in South Philly) for some reason. Even then, I think there's a grammatical gap being filled in how there's a difference in subject-object relationship between "you" or "ya" and "youse."
Y'all is the best english second person plural word.
All the others sound incorrect. Y'all is a contraction of you all
I use it a lot partly because it's just more of a Pennsylvania/New Jersey thing than anywhere else outside of the South, and perhaps a little because I lived in the South at different points, but mostly it's because I went to a school where a third of the kids were black and at least half of them were from North Philly—best known as the birthing place of the expressions "jawn" and "salty," the latter technically pronounced "sawdy."
Seriously, I was in on the ground floor on "salty" and everybody and their mom uses it now and pronounces it wrong because you're a buncha fuckin' noobs.
Seriously, I was in on the ground floor on "salty" and everybody and their mom uses it now and pronounces it wrong because you're a buncha fuckin' noobs.
"Salty" and "salty ('sawdy')" are different words though.
Comments
(The other Jane)
(The other Jane)
(The other Jane)
(The other Jane)
I envy the dead
(Uh, in English that is, I heard all kinds of French pronounce in Montreal.)