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- From: casseres@apple.com (David Casseres)
- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Subject: Re: dassn't
- Message-ID: <casseres-181192225314@kip2-46.apple.com>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 05:49:21 GMT
- References: <1992Nov14.190523.16065@rose.com>
- Sender: usenet@Apple.COM
- Followup-To: alt.usage.english
- Organization: Apple Computer, Inc.
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <1992Nov14.190523.16065@rose.com>, greg.grainger@rose.com (greg
- grainger) wrote:
- >
- >
- > Date Entered: 11-14-92 14:00
- > On Nov. 12, chantal@osf.org (Chantal Eide) wrote:
- >
- > C(>I heard a very old lady use the word "dassn't."
- > C(>"I dassn't miss another day." Sort of like dare not
- > C(>or ought not. Does anyone know something about this
- > C(>word? Where it originated? If it's a contraction?
- >
- > It's a contraction of 'dare not' - I have always had the idea that it is a
- > dialect variant from the American South.
-
- I have heard (or at least read) "dast" as a colloquial equivalent of "dare"
- in the Southern states. It would be derived from "durst" or "darest,"
- originally past-tense forms or 2nd-person singular present, but I think
- "dast" can fit most any tense or person. "Dassn't," I think, must be a
- contraction of "dast not."
-
- I looked for "dast" in the OED, finding "darest" and "dar'st" and "durst"
- under "dare" -- along with lots of other forms and the fact that our
- present tense forms for this verb come from the original preterite tense.
- I had thought it would turn out to be a subjunctive form, but no.
-
- --
-
- David Casseres
- Exclaimer: Wow!
-