Citations:y'all

Verb: "To use the pronoun 'y'all'"

 * 1971, Frank Deford, There she is: the life and times of Miss America:
 * She blithely maintained that she could have smiled magnolias and "y'alled" her way out of any tight spots. Yolande has lived in Washington for several years now, and although talk is cheap there and Yolande likes to talk, she will not relax and trade in the endemic blarney. She is always forthright, and a cynic. "At some point I remember Atlantic City telling me that I had the honor of going to Paris and wearing our American cotton dresses into the very heart of haute couture," she says.
 * 1990, Paul Levy, Finger lickin' good: a Kentucky childhood:
 * With his swarthy complexion and jet black, straight hair, Louis was actually quite dashing. He wore his expensively cut clothes and heavy rings well, too. Besides his short stature, his most noticeable peculiarity was that he had a voice like Lytton Strachey's, which moved alarmingly, in the middle of a sentence, or sometimes halfway through a word, from a booming bass to the high-pitched, almost whistling soprano of a boy whose voice has not yet broken. As he y'alled and drawled ...
 * 1997, Terence Sieg, Golf travel's guide to the world's greatest golf destinations: the ultimate resource for the discriminating golfer:
 * Indeed, non-Southerners may feel themselves "y'alled" to death down here, yet even the most stony- faced New Englander will be charmed by the warmth of the Cloister's staff. The tradition of service is simply better and more deeply entrenched in the South than in any other region of the United States. At times, the social whirl at the Cloister harkens back to a bygone era with ballroom dancing at the Beach Club and rumba lessons in the club rooms, ...