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The Florence Y\'all Water Tower in Florence, Kentucky. The sign was changed from "FLORENCE MALL" to solve a temporary legal issue with the intent to change it back soon afterward, but instead became an attraction in its own right.
Y\'all, sometimes spelled as "Ya\'ll", "Yawl", or "Yaw", and archaically spelled "You-all", is a fused grammaticalization of the phrase "you all". It is used primarily as a plural second-person pronoun, and less often as a singular second-person pronoun. Commonly believed to have originated in the Southern United States, it is primarily associated with Southern American English, African American Vernacular English, and some dialects of the Western United States.Bernstein, Cynthia: "Grammatical Features of Southern speech: Yall, Might could, and fixin to". English in the Southern United States, 2003, pp. 106 Cambridge University Press
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There are currently six recognized[not in citation given] properties that y\'all followsChing, Marvin K. L.: "Plural You/Y\'all Variation by a Court Judge: Situational Use". American Speech - Volume 76, Number 2, Summer 2001, pp. 115-127 Duke University Press:
Y\'all is also used in the phrase "all y\'all", which is a more inclusive form comparable to "all of you". This can cause some amusement as "all y\'all" can be interpreted as "all of you all". Note that we can be used as the first-person analog of y\'all for the first three properties listed above.
Y\'all is growing in usage as a gender-neutral pronoun rather than term \'you guys,\' which some consider biased.
The true origin of the term is uncertain. It is a common belief that y\'all evolved in the speech of people in the Southern United States as a replacement for "you all" due to its convenience.[citation needed] Rather than say you all, you-uns, you lot, or you guys; y\'all may be construed as a single element requiring only one morpheme. However, some argue that the stress pattern of y\'all does not favor the contraction you+all because it would likely derive you\'ll instead of y\'all.
Though the you all contraction argument may make sense when considering current-day vernacular, it is prudent to consider the vernacular which existed at the time which y\'all was likely invented. By the late 1700s, Scots-Irish immigrants had settled in the Southern United States. It is well established that Scots-Irish immigrants frequently used the term ye aw. Bernstein, Cynthia: "Grammatical Features of Southern Speech: Yall, Might could, and fixin to". English in the Southern United States, 2003, pp. 108-109 Cambridge University Press Some evidence suggests that y\'all could have evolved from ye aw due to the influence of African slaves who may have adapted the Scots-Irish term.Lipski, John. 1993. "Y\'all in American English," English World-Wide 14:23-56.
The ye+aw origin may be apparent in a modern-day variation of y\'all whereby some put the apostrophe after the \'a\' (e.g. ya\'ll). This suggests that y\'all could be a contraction for ya all. This is illustrated in the phrase "Ya\'ll come back now, ya hear!" in a recent[when?] Best Western advertisement. Best Western Garden Inn, San Antonio Texas
The evolution of y\'all continues today. There appears to be an increasing tendency[citation needed], especially on the Internet, to spell it without the apostrophe, yall.
There is also a long-standing disagreement about whether y\'all can have primarily singular reference. While y\'all is generally used in the Southern United States as the plural form of "you" a scant but vocal minority (for example, Eric Hyman[1] Hyman, Eric: "The All of You-all", American Speech 81:3(2006)) argue that the term can be used in the singular. Adding confusion to this issue is that observers attempting to judge usage may witness a single person addressed as y\'all if the speaker implies in the reference other persons not present: "Have y\'all [you and others] had dinner yet?" (to which the answer would be, "Yes, we have", even though a single person has answered.)
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