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| English Slang English Slang consists of informal words involving the creation of new linguistic forms or adaptations. Explain and help your colleagues understand the meaning of these expressions, which differ from colloquial English. |
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#1 |
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Could you tell me what does "ain't" exactly mean and where did it come from? Is it some kind of a short way to say either "isn't" or "aren't"?
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#2 |
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Hi Ezequiel! Ain't is a very colloquial word usually from the southern parts of the U.S. It is considered "improper English" but means "is/are not." Personally it is just as short as saying "isn't or aren't," but I think it is used more for effect than anything. Another similar word that is very characteristic of the south is "y'all" meaning "you all."
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#3 |
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That´s right Ezequiel. This is a very informal way to form "negative auxiliary verbs”
Not only for the verb to be but also for auxiliaries like "do" or "have" For instance I ain´t got money (I haven’t got any money) Where does it come from? I ain´t got a clue (jeje), but never use it fromal texts
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#4 |
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Thx a lot! I've had that doubt for years.
Even my english teacher couldn't answer me when I asked her the meaning of "ain't" :P |
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#5 |
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Look what I found about the origin and early usage of aint...
Ain’t arose toward the end of an 18 century period that marked the development of most of the English contracted verb forms such as can’t, don’t, and won’t. The form first appears in print in 1778. It was preceded by an’t, which had been common for about a century previously, and indeed is still commonly used in some parts of England. An’t appears first in print in the work of Restoration playwrights: it is seen first in 1695, when William Congreve wrote I can hear you farther off, I an’t deaf, suggesting that the form was in the beginning a contraction of “am not”. But as early as 1696 Sir John Vanbrugh uses the form for “are not”: These shoes an't ugly, but they don't fit me... At least in some dialects, an’t is likely to have been pronounced like ain’t, and thus the appearance of ain’t is more a clarified spelling than a new verb form. In some dialects of British English, are rhymed with air, and a 1791 American spelling reformer proposed spelling “are” as er Ain’t in these earliest uses seems to have served as a contraction for both am not and are not.
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#6 |
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That's interesting Sandra! Actually ain't is still used in that sense...for example "I ain't going to wash those dishes!" I had no idea that it had such a long history!
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#7 | |
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Quote:
That is so interesting and so true! I had an English Professor use it once in one of my classes when we were talking about race. She said, "there ain't nothing wrong with using 'ain't'!" |
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#8 |
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Haha, thanks for the info, I never knew. however, I must say that hearing ain't still makes me cringe.....
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In Atlanta people will tell you "ain't ain't a word."
Ya'll is one of my favorites. Ya'll with a drawl is the only way you'll here it (properly?) used... |
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