Citations:you-uns


 * 1885, Mary Noailles Murfree, The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains, page 7 (also published in The Atlantic Monthly, page 1):
 * "I hev seen that critter, that thar preacher, a-hangin&#39; round you-uns&#39;s house a powerful deal lately, whilst I hev been obleeged ter hide out in the woods. n&#39; bein&#39;ez nobody thar owns up ter needin&#39; religion but ye, I reckoned he war a-tryin&#39; ter git ye ter take him an&#39; grace tergether. "
 * 1898, Will Allen Dromgoole, Cinch, and Other Stories: Tales of Tennessee, page 337:
 * "I knowed Teen would be willin&#39; ter go, because Teen ain&#39;t never been knowed ter refuse ter go ter Beersheby yit, after it air known you-uns&#39; house air open." He laughed and looked at the girl, waiting for her to admit the pleasant charge.
 * 1912, Mary Noailles Murfree (and Charles Egbert Craddock?), The Raid of the Guerilla: And Other Stories, page 26; also published as 1909, Harper's [Monthly] Magazine, page 201:
 * The sound attracted the miller&#39;s attention. He fixed his eyes warily upon her, a sudden thought looking out from their network of wrinkles. “You didn&#39;t see no guide whenst they slipped past you-uns&#39; house, did ye, Sis?” Poor, unwilling casuist! She had an instinct for the truth in its purest sense, the innate impulse toward the verities unspoiled by the taint of sophistication.
 * 2011, Jan Karon, Jan Karons Mitford Years: Novels Six Through Nine; Plus a Father Tim Novel, Penguin (ISBN 9781101548523):
 * “Hit stinks in you&#39;uns&#39; house.” “Mmight be y&#39;r upper llip,” said Sammy. Father Tim crawled into bed and punched up his pillow. As all beds were taken, Sissie sprawled on the loveseat in their bedroom, snoring beneath a quilt.