Over the weekend I was at a social function and heard someone use “you’uns” as a second person plural pronoun. I’d never heard that one, and I have to admit that I had to restrain the impulse to go into judgemental “what inbred mountain clan did you escape from” mode. I wouldn’t have said anything, of course, but my mind went in that direction before I reined it in with thoughts of regional linguistic differences and how interesting they are. I started thinking about second person plurals in general: you, ya’ll, youse, and you’uns were the only ones I can think of. Are there others? With all of the regional dialects in England, and with the 2nd person plural being something of a fault line in the language (it seems to me), I expect that there are, but I don’t know of any. Can anybody else come up with any others?
Also, why is the 2nd person plural such a fault line? It’s the only pronoun I can think of that changes from dialect to dialect (actually, now that has me thinking too. Jon Boy, are there other pronouns that change from English dialect to English dialect?). Why is that? Or for that matter, why does standard English use the same word for both the singular and the plural? It seems like something with that level of ambiguity would have evolved toward clarity a long time ago. I suppose that the regional variations are probably exactly that evolution, eh? Which means that (if I’m right) I just answered my second question.