I was born and raised in New England, and I don’t use “y’all”.
And I wish those of you from away would stop trying to use “ayuh” because you just don’t do it right.
I was born and raised in New England, and I don’t use “y’all”.
And I wish those of you from away would stop trying to use “ayuh” because you just don’t do it right.
applies to a group of two or more.
I am in MS. i think i would know…
Hmmm. I was taught (by my Georgian Grandparents) that “y’all” refers to one person and “all y’all” refers to more than one person.
I, however, am a Yankee (Illinois, near Chicago) born and raised, so perhaps they were pulling my leg.
I agree with this, only I’m waiting for “vosotros” (The 2nd person plural that they use in Spain).
Oh, and in case ya’ll want to know, I’m from Virginia, by the way.
Your grandparents were wrong.
Not surprising. She also baked hams for 7 hours and thought brussels sprouts should be a smooth paste when fully cooked. He was Archie Bunker with a Southern accent. I really didn’t like visiting there much.
But y’all have fought my ignorance. Thank you kindly!
Aww. I find it very sad that you have been shamed into not using “y’all.” A little defiance can be fun. I encountered the same attitudes when I went off to college, but kept right on using the word. By the time I graduated, I had all the Yankees in my dorm using “y’all” unselfconsciously.
Y’all is almost exclusively plural. Its use as a singular appears to be limited to 1.) certain Texas and Deep South enclaves, and 2.) people who have never been in the South who are faking Southern dialect for some reason.
I think I understand some of the confusion; it’s not uncommon for one singular Southerner to meet another and to say, “How y’all been?” This sounds like it is meant to address only the other person, hence the confusion. However, it really refers to that person, his family, his crew, etc., since the other person likely knows all them, too. It’s like saying, “How are you and yours?”, but without sounding so lame.
I’m from eastern Kentucky, where you hear “you’uns” just about as often as “y’all”. (“You’uns” has two clear syllables, as opposed to the Pennsylvania “yinz”.)
OP=carnivorousplant
1) Does ya’ll mean one one person or a group?
That’s y’all, not "ya’ll, it’s the contracted form of you all and it’s plural of course.
*2) Did y’all (dammit) *
Did we what dammit? I didn’t damn nothing, dangitall!
2A) Did you learn to speak in Texas?
[/QUOTE]
What’s Texas got to do with it? Folks there say that petroleum gunk they used to could pump out from under their land is called “awl”.
Did you click “Submit” before you were done with this? No offense, 'plant, but you’ve got language problems here that have nothing to do with the use of “y’all”.
I, on the other hand, merely have coding problems.
:mad:
Did y’all know that “Webster’s” is not copyrighted?
Dammit!
Pittsburghese for ‘y’all’ (lit. ‘you ones’).
Splendid! This one made me laugh out loud.
As for me, I think y’all refers to a group. I learned to speak in upstate New York but acquired y’all after moving to southern Ohio as a child…actually quite a few years later, when I was finally willing to overlook my parents’ prejudice against y’all and other regionalisms.
It’s a perfectly fine and even charming word. But why do so many people let the apostrophe creep (ya’ll)? That’s just wrong, y’all.
[hijack]
Also, I ain’t afraid to use “ain’t”.
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“Y’all” is plural. But, if a single person is addressed using “y’all” (as in: “how y’all doing?”), it’s still plural. The question being asked is “how are you and your family?” That’s a really common usage of “y’all”. If a single person is asked something like “can y’all help me with this?”, the questioner is a Yankee.
I’m from Gainesville, FL which is in North Florida and Southern as opposed to South Florida which is Northern.
For the record, I can speak nearly immaculate English if I wish to but part of a language is appreciating the flavors and variations found therein. If we all spoke perfectly things wouldn’t be half as fun. Thus, I have come to embrace my roots and the vernacular that goes with them.
Y’all is always plural in my neck of the woods. Houston.
I’m from Texas, still live here, and I’ve never heard anyone here use “y’all” to refer to a single person. “Y’all” is always more than one person, at least 'round these parts.
1, 2, 2A dammit.
In fact I caught the first few minutes of “Not Another Teen Movie” on TV the other day and thought to myself how stupid the Big Kid (Billy Bob??) sounded when he was telling (only) the Foot Ball Jock, “Can’t wait for the big game, y’all!”.
Must have been a Yankee screenwriter, y’all.
2a) Not Texas, the Southern, Central Valley of California. Lots of Okies 'round here.