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slang - Etymology of using ya instead of you - English Language . . . OED, rather than listing 'ya' as a form of 'you' and 'your', gives 'ya' (pronoun and adjective) separate entries with a distinct origin and etymology In both cases, the origin is a "variant or alteration of another lexical item" ('you' and 'your') and the etymology is that they represent "a regional or colloquial (chiefly unstressed
Yall or yall? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Southerns wouldn't have abbrev that phrase in such a way however, when saying "ya all," them words tenda run tagedder When you say "you will" the distinction of the "wi" sound tends to disappear, so its dropped when spelling "you'll " Similarly, "ya all" became "ya'll "
What is the origin of the phrase Top of the morning to you? The phrase emerges from two related meanings of "top," was a common greeting throughout the United Kingdom in the 19th century, and fell out of use only to be revived as a so-called Irish expression by American filmmakers looking for ways to distinguish Irish characters
punctuation - Should ya have an apostrophe? Doin? Etc - English . . . I thought ya was a contraction of ya'll, which was a contraction of you all Hence, it should be ya' But I might be mistaken Your input is welcome (Also, as a logician, I need to point out that you're wrong that you only use apostrophe to indicate letter omissions I dare you to construct a possessive form without it In a general case!
What is “Who are ya?” and whence it came? Who are ya?! 2) Leyton Orient (small football club) v Chelsea (big football club) The Chelsea player, Didier Drogba, misses a clear chance of scoring a goal and falls over badly, clutching his knee in agony
When is it appropriate to use see you later? When my girlfriend says "good night" (when sleeping in the same bed) I usually say "see ya" and she just laughs like it doesn't make sense Oh whale, say what you want when you want Anyway I think #4 doesn't make sense, but the other choices are fine
grammaticality - See you~What does it mean? - English Language Usage . . . As a stock phrase "See ya!" does in fact mean "Goodbye!" Variations include "Be seeing you" and "See you again soon " It is a warmly connoted bidding of farewell It is related to Auf Weidersehen- literally "until (I we) see (you each other) again"
pronunciation - Why is J often used to represent a Y sound in . . . "Ya" would certainly be preferred to "ja" Romanization is not really what happens when one attempts to write non-Roman alphabet letters in English Romanization can render "Я" as "ja", as many languages using the Roman alphabet use "j" for a sound much like the English "y"