L
lowkey13
Guest
*Deleted by user*
Like ... the actual South, or the made-up South (aka Texas)?
Because in the actual South, the singular "y'all" occurs.
I've lived in the South my entire life and I've never really seen this fabeled "singular y'all" out in the wild. If the conversations where it's attributed are taken in context, there is most likely an address of unseen others.
You're hilarious.
I'll give you three of those states.
....Well, all five are more Southern than Texas, but that's not saying much. That's like, "I'm a real New Englander! I'm from Pennsylvania!"
Grammar does matter, despite some of the responses here. Submit a job application with "I can't wait to work for you're company. I've only heard really good things their." Or write a book like that.
And see what happens. Just because lots of people keep messing up grammar doesn't mean it's suddenly acceptable to do.
Like ... the actual South, or the made-up South (aka Texas)?
Because in the actual South, the singular "y'all" occurs.
No, those words are spelled correctly. "Their' is a correct spelling. The usage is wrong, therefore, grammar issue.
I dunno. Spelling “there” as “their” certainly looks like a spelling mistake to me. I was not confused by their meaning (which is typical for grammar issues), just their spelling. But that’s enough on that.