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What dose the "ain't" mean? A: So go ahead, say goodbye to it, because I'm coming back without it. B: Goodbye and good riddance. A: You ain't had to add the "good riddance" part. What dose the "ain't" mean? Is this sentence the same as: You didn't have to add the "good riddance" part? THX!
28 de jan de 2015 05:09
Respostas · 3
1
Its southern slang. Sometimes it means "do not" or "am not"... 1. You ain't got an umbrella? 2. I ain't going outside in that rain. You don't really need that word because its bad grammar.
28 de janeiro de 2015
It is technically "bad grammar" but if you are watching a lot of English movies and TV shows, you will hear "ain't" all the time. As everybody says, it is probably not a good idea to use it, but in general it is a shortened form of "are not," "am not" and "is not"-- it works for every conjugation of English: I ain't, you ain't, he ain't, we ain't, y'all (you, plural: only used in the South and in certain classes, but you might hear it) ain't, they ain't. I actually do say "ain't" sometimes-- it's a good word to know when you hear it, but it does not sound nice unless you know exactly when to use it.
29 de janeiro de 2015
Yes, you've guessed correctly: "You didn't have to..." "Ain't" is a non-standard negative word, but using it will mark you as someone from a specific social class or region. Really, as a learner you'll have almost no reason to use it, unless your native English-speaking friends actually speak like that.
28 de janeiro de 2015
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