A northern girl says "yes you can" a southern says "yes you all can".
ya'll
<table id="entries"><tbody><tr><td class="word">ya'll</td><td id="tools_1347769" class="tools">
385 up,
354 downhttp://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=ya'll#http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=ya'll#</td></tr><tr><td></td><td id="entry_1347769" class="text" colSpan="2">Slang contraction for the 2nd person plural pronoun, utilized amongst the indigenous populations of the southern continental United States.
Origin: Often incorrectly attributed to the contraction of "you + all," the word actually originated from the fusing of "
ya + all." The kind of fella who would say ya'll for the first time would not be enunciating a clean and crisp "you" in his daily speech. "You" wasn't in his spoken vocabulary, but "
ya" was. Now, try to say "ya all." It is actually not easy to do as two separate words. To say it with a normal cadence, it already almost sounds like ya'll, but with the slightest stutter. "Ya all" quite naturally slips into the familiar pronoun we all use.
Ya + all = ya'll. When you look at it that way, the placement of the apostrophe after the "a" makes sense. Alternately, you + all =
y'all. However, the ya + all transition more naturally illustrates the origin of "ya'll." "You all" is cumbersome, although that is usually how yall is explained to uninitiated Yankees, whose experience with "
ya" is often limited. "You all" just doesn't lead the the inevitable ya'll that "Ya all" does. However,
more...buy ya'll mugs & shirts
</td></tr></tbody></table>