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  • Etymology of using ya instead of you - slang
    9 I have noticed that some people in parts of Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio often say "ya" instead of "you"? As in "Didya do your homework?" instead of "Did you do your homework?" Does anyone know the etymology behind this pronunciation? I am wondering if this could be evidence of the influence of a large population of people that still speak
  • Yall or yall? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    If anything, isn't ya'll a contraction of you will (where you is written as ya, as in "ya know")? Otherwise, the only explanation I can come up with for why someone would ever spell it ya'll is through (mistaken) analogy with contractions like I'll, he'll, etc
  • What is “Who are ya?” and whence it came?
    2 "Who are ya?" is a rhetorical question asking the other, lowly team to justify their presence at a match or level they don't deserve to play at It's a mark of lack of repect to the other team Yes, it's a fair assessment that it means to diminish the opposition as unknown and insignificant The top Urban Dictionary definition gives guidance
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  • punctuation - Should ya have an apostrophe? Doin? Etc - English . . .
    In "ya", the "ou" vowel has been replaced with "a" We don't have punctuation to indicate that, so we just write it This is also generally the case where a replacement slang informal word is missing letters, but others have changed When this happens, we usually just transcribe the sounds rather than using an apostrophe
  • Idiom: Origin of the phrase a bit how ya going to mean . . . - slang
    2 The phrase refers to the social class of the speaker, as in 'How ya goin' is originally something a lower or working class person would say in post WW I Australia So it means dodgy or unsure of the reliability However it has become nonsensical because the phrase 'how's it going?' has run around the world like a bushfire since the 1970's
  • orthography - Spelling Yeah and Yea - English Language Usage . . .
    They are differentiated by spelling: Yay [ jɛi ] (as opposed to, say, boo) is for joy and exultation; Yeah [ jæ ] (synonym of yes, opposite of nah) is for ordinary assent; and Yea [ jɛi ] (opposite of nay) is for formal assent during a vote It's just that many people type yea (or even just ya) when they mean yeah Outside of the U S , yeh [ jɛ ] is also common
  • What is the origin of the expression ya think?
    2 Maybe I'm just slow on the uptake, but the expression "ya think" seems to have recently become nearly universal, at least as viewed from the US and the UK, where I encounter it all the time, spoken by all kinds of people What is the origin of this expression? Is it indeed recent?


















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