Really? Do you hear "ain't" often in other areas of Scotland?Baccarat said:I hear, and use, "ain't" all the time. I'm from Glasgow, Scotland and honestly, I'd be more surprised to hear someone saying "aren't" here.
I can't say I've ever paid much attention, but just as the accent changes, it'd be pretty reasonable to assume that the way of speaking would too. I wouldn't expect to hear the same slang used in, say, Edinburgh for example. And Glasgow is rather well known for it's, ah, colourful vernacular.Naheal said:Really? Do you hear "ain't" often in other areas of Scotland?Baccarat said:I hear, and use, "ain't" all the time. I'm from Glasgow, Scotland and honestly, I'd be more surprised to hear someone saying "aren't" here.
That would be a natural conclusion to reach, but, as the data here's suggesting, the only major dialect that doesn't use "ain't" is Australian, but even that has exceptions there.Baccarat said:I can't say I've ever paid much attention, but just as the accent changes, it'd be pretty reasonable to assume that the way of speaking would too. I wouldn't expect to hear the same slang used in, say, Edinburgh for example. And Glasgow is rather well known for it's, ah, colourful vernacular.Naheal said:Really? Do you hear "ain't" often in other areas of Scotland?Baccarat said:I hear, and use, "ain't" all the time. I'm from Glasgow, Scotland and honestly, I'd be more surprised to hear someone saying "aren't" here.
Then you will confuse a lot of peopleqeinar said:i usually reffer to "british english" as english. : p
I've never heard any American say "innit", and when I heard a British person say it, I had no idea what it meant.Dags90 said:I wished more Americans used "innit". If you're going to force a question into every sentence, I'd prefer "innit?" to "you know (what I mean)?" I swear, some people just have total aversions to statements and only speak in questions.
Lol and that's another word I didn't know until I joined this community, "Chav", lol.Vault Citizen said:Personally I think whichever group came up with the word innit (my guess is either chavs or northerners) should be banned from contributing to the English language ever again. I remain hopeful that as a word it will one day die out.Dags90 said:I wished more Americans used "innit". If you're going to force a question into every sentence, I'd prefer "innit?" to "you know (what I mean)?" I swear, some people just have total aversions to statements and only speak in questions.