It's not that I've had that much "trouble" with the situation, really. And it's not about being lazy. Let me just clarify and say the major I am pursuing requires that I think about these things a lot.Mr Thin said:I've never had any trouble with this sort of situation, and I think y'all makes you sound like a hillbilly.
Maybe it's just me, but I find that unpleasant.
I suppose it could be treated as a legitimate contraction, but it would take a long, long time for the hillbillyness of it to wear off.
I personally wouldn't use it, even if they stuck it in a dictionary and made it official or whatever.
Were this:Mr Thin said:Maybe it's just me, but I find that unpleasant.
It sounds a little stiff if you say it out loud, DOESN'T it? ("Does not it?")Mr Thin said:Maybe it is just me, but I find that unpleasant.
What its a group of girls? What if its a mixed group and you want to address both genders? I would say "you people" is a more neutral alternative except for the negative connotation of that phrase that makes it undesirable too. It's actually quiet confusing.Revenge Revisited said:Grr, whenever someone says "y'all" it makes me want to punch them. I just say "you guys" when addressing a group.
Yes, it most certainly does.Harry Mason said:In your post, you used three separate contractions ("I've," "It's," and "wouldn't). Those words have probably been in the common vocabulary as long as you and I have been alive, but to your average well-spoken person 100 years ago, they sounded decidedly "hick."
Imagine if this:
Were this:Mr Thin said:Maybe it's just me, but I find that unpleasant.
It sounds a little stiff if you say it out loud, DOESN'T it? ("Does not it?")Mr Thin said:Maybe it is just me, but I find that unpleasant.
That's precisely my point! There is a solid chance that "y'all" will be common English in the near future. I think predicting and discussing the evolution of language is quite interesting and thread worthy, but then maybe that's because I'm a massive nerd and a linguistics major.Mr Thin said:Yes, it most certainly does.Harry Mason said:In your post, you used three separate contractions ("I've," "It's," and "wouldn't). Those words have probably been in the common vocabulary as long as you and I have been alive, but to your average well-spoken person 100 years ago, they sounded decidedly "hick."
Imagine if this:
Were this:Mr Thin said:Maybe it's just me, but I find that unpleasant.
It sounds a little stiff if you say it out loud, DOESN'T it? ("Does not it?")Mr Thin said:Maybe it is just me, but I find that unpleasant.
And perhaps, to the average well-spoken person 100 years from now, "y'all" will sound just as normal to them as "wouldn't" does to me.
But that's in the future, just as "wouldn't" sounding "hick" is in the past.
Right now, "wouldn't" sounds perfectly normal, and "y'all" makes you sound like white trash.
English has lost a lot of words due to disuse, but most of them are formal pronouns, like you said. Formal pronouns becoming extinct in English makes sense to me. The importance of status has waned due to civil rights, changes in the economy, etc. What I can't figure out is why something as USEFUL as a gender neutral second person plural pronoun would disappear.Twilight_guy said:OT: I think English used to have a second person plural int he same way it used to have a formal pronouns, like "thy." They were lost overtime from lack of use with lots of other parts of English as it evolved. If its underused enough to not warrant continued inclusion in the language its probably not something that is a major concern. Still, We could just have the official people in charge of official English create a second person plural pronoun.