Pronouns and demonstratives "Them" is sometimes used in place of "those" as a demonstrative in both nominal and adjectival and both nominative and oblique constructions. Examples are "Them are the pants I want" and "Give me some of them crackers." Oblique forms of the personal pronouns are used as nominative when more than one is used (cf. French
moi et toi). For example, "Me and him are real good friends" instead of "He and I are really good friends." Accusative case personal pronouns are used as reflexives in situations which, in American English, do not typically demand them (e.g., "I'm gonna get me a haircut"). The -self/-selves forms are used almost exclusively as emphatics, and then often in non-standard forms (e.g., "the preacher hisself"). Second person pronouns are often retained as subjects in imperative sentences (e.g., "You go an' get you a cookie"). The possessive absolute form of "yinz/yunz/you'uns" is
yournses. Pronouns and adjectives are sometimes combined with "'un" (meaning "one"), such as "young'un" to mean "child", "big'un" to mean "big one", and "you'uns" to mean "you all". "Young'n'" and "'big'n'" also are common in
Northern England. The word element "-ever" is sometimes reversed in words such as "whatever" ("everwhat"), "whoever" ("everwho"), and "however" ("everhow"), but the usage remains the same (e.g., "Everwho did this is in big trouble").
Verbs Conjugation of the verb "to be" The conjugation of the verb "to be" is different from that of standard English in several ways, and sometimes more than one form of the verb "to be" is acceptable in Appalachian English. Divergence from standard English conjugation of the verb "to be" occurs with the highest frequency in the past tense, where grammatically plural subjects also take the singular form "was" rather than "were". Thus, the paradigm of the verb "to be" in Appalachian English more closely resembles the paradigm for other non-"be" verbs in English, where the past tense takes a single form, regardless of number or person. The use of the word ''
ain't'' is also one of the most salient features of this dialect. While "ain't" is used to some extent in most American English dialects, it is used with much greater frequency in the Appalachian dialect. Similarly, the phrase "it is" frequently appeared as "it are" in Appalachian English as late as the mid-twentieth century.
Conjugation among other verb types While the greatest amount of divergence in subject-verb concord occurs in the past tense of the verb 'to be', certain types of plural subjects have an effect on concord across various types of verbs. However, plural subjects continue to show the greatest frequency of non-concord. The example below is taken from : Conjoined noun phrases: • "Me and my sister gets into a fight sometimes." • "A boy and his daddy was a-huntin'." Collective noun phrases: • "Some people makes it from fat off a pig." • "People's not concerned." Other plural noun phrases: • "...no matter what their parents has taught 'em." • "The cars was all tore up." Expletive 'there': • "There's different breeds of 'em." • "There was 5 in our family."
A-verb-ing (a-prefixing) A notable feature of Appalachian English is the
a-prefix which occurs with participle forms ending in
-ing. This prefix is pronounced as a schwa . The
a-prefix most commonly occurs with progressives, in both past and non-past tenses. For example, "My cousin had a little pony and we was a-ridin' it one day". Common contexts also include where the participle form functions as an adverbial complement, such as after movement verbs (
come,
go,
take off) and with verbs of continuing or starting (
keep,
start,
get to). Examples include "All of a sudden a bear come a-runnin'," "He just kep' a-beggin'," and the song lyric "
A froggie went a-courtin' and he did ride." Phonological rules and restrictions apply to
a-prefixing; for example, it can only occur with verbs accented on the initial syllable:
a-fóllowin but not
a-discóverin or
a-retírin. Moreover, it cannot occur on
–ing forms functioning as nouns or adjectives; the forms must function as verbs. Thus, sentences like
the movie was a-charmin are ungrammatical. Because of the considerable difference of
a-prefixing frequency according to age (the frequency varied between 10% and 50%),
Walt Wolfram (1976) supports the "(...) contention that
a-prefixing is a phenomenon that is dying out in Appalachia".
A-prefixing can be traced back to the 16th century: The construction reached its height from 1500 to 1700 and developed out of using the preposition "on" and a verbal noun ending in
-ing. Only used in formal and educated writing in the 17th century, it became nonstandard in the 18th century. Montgomery (2009) argues that a-prefixing developed from the preposition "an"/"on" in Early Middle English and suggests that it arose from the loss of the -n from "on" in examples like "hee set before his eyes king Henrie the eight with all his Lordes
on hunting in his forrest at Windsore" (Thomas Nashe, "Unfortunate Traveller", 1594).
'Liketa' In Appalachian English, the form 'liketa' functions as an adverb and occurs before the past form of a verb. 'Liketa' carries a meaning similar to "on the verge of" or "came so close that I really thought
x would", where
x is the subject of the verb. It comes from a compression of the phrase "likely to". • "I
liketa never went to sleep last night." • "And I knew what I'd done and boy it
liketa scared me to death." 'Liketa' also imposes a notion of impossibility on the clause in which it appears, distinguishing it from the word 'almost'. For example, "They almost made it to the top of the mountain" is allowed but not "They liketa made it to the top of the mountain." 'Liketa' does not carry the same notion of partial truth as 'almost'.
Other verb forms • Sometimes the past participle of a strong verb such as "do" is used in place of the past tense. For example, "I done it already" instead of "I did it already" or in the case of the verb "see", "I seen" instead of "I saw". "Went" is often used instead of "gone" as the past participle of the verb "to go".
She had went to Ashland. Less frequently, "gone" is used as the simple past tense: "I gone down to the meeting, but wasn't nobody there." "Done" is used with the past tense (or a past participle commonly used as a past tense, such as "gone") to express action just completed, as in "I done went/gone to the store". • Some English strong verbs are occasionally conjugated as weak verbs in Appalachian English, e.g. "knowed", and "seed". • The construction "don't...no" is used with transitive verbs to indicate the negative, e.g. "He don't know no better." This is commonly referred to as the
double negative, and is either negative or emphatically negative, never positive. "None" is often used in place of "any", as in "I don't have none." • Verb forms for the verb "to lay" are used instead of forms of the verb "to lie". For example, "Lay down and hush." The same occurs with "set" for "sit", and "leave" for "let". • "Might could|would|should" is sometimes used where a speaker of standard English would say "might be able to" or "could maybe". It is often used as a sort of equivalent to "If it weren't for X", such as "I might would, if I had any to spare." This is found in Scots as well. • Verbs ending in -st, -sk, and -sp take the syllabic -es rather than Standard -s, pronounced /ɪz/, e.g. "costes".
Nouns Double nouns Some nouns are spoken in pairs, the first noun describing the seemingly redundant second noun, as in "hound dog", "Cadillac car", "widow woman", "toad frog", "biscuit bread", or "rifle gun".
Measurement nouns Measurements such as "foot" and "mile" often retain their singular form even when used in the plural sense. For example, "That stick is 3 foot long", or "We need 6 foot of drywall".
Adverbs The word
right can be used with adjectives (e.g., "a right cold morning") and along with its standard use with adverbs, can also be used with adverbs of manner and time (e.g., "right loud" or "right often"). ==Vocabulary==