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- What is the history and geographic area of the word finna?
In St Louis, I learned of the word, "finna " I know it is slang contraction for "fixing to " By asking dozens of people, I've learned that it is used by people of many different races and cultural backgrounds I've also learned that many who use this word have been using it all their lives (for some, that means at least 50 years)
- Whats up with the term finna? : r OutOfTheLoop - Reddit
Yes, "finna" is derived from "fixing to" but these are not sayings exclusive to the "African American" community or vernacular This phrasing is used commonly by southerners country folk and "fixing to" dates back into at least the '40s
- american english - How to use the word finna correctly? - English . . .
@nnythm: My interpretation of the speech pattern that Peaches Monroee (the person featured in the Vine excerpt from which the quotation is taken) uses here is that the implied "are" falls immediately after "We" at the beginning of the quotation and establishes two parallel branches of expression: "We [are] [1] in dis bitch, [2] finna get crunk "
- If you are not black, is saying the the word “finna . . . - Reddit
•the root term for "finna" come from "fixing to"(or "fitting to, depending on dialect) "fixing to" is a Dixie term used the exact same as finna •"finna" originates from Dixie culture influencing population dense south, with population dense south having Dixie family providing them with rural south slang as an influence on their diction
- Finna vs Gonna : r EnglishLearning - Reddit
“Finna” is a contraction of “fixing to,” which means “going to” or “about to ” It’s normally only found in African American Vernacular English and Southern American English As a non native speaker, I don’t recommend trying to imitate the dialects of English that use “finna” or “fixing to,” but “gonna” and
- Why do people say finna instead of gonna nowadays?
But I've never seen nor heard people say "finna" and until I would have been really bewildered People have lots of different accents and dialects and that's perfectly fine But when you use a lot of slang on a website where people from many different countries are on, it can confuse or even trigger some people
- What does finna mean? I’ve seen it quite often lately
40 years ago I learned in high-school speech class that any word or phrase that is generally accepted and understood is valid speech
- Aussie here, what is with saying finna? : r AskAnAmerican - Reddit
Fixing to finna tends to be more immediate than going to gonna I'm finna go home is Simon' someone about to walk out the door I'm gonna go back home is often more open ended, sometime in the near future But yeah-- there's overlap Going to is often more ambiguous and likely results in someone asking, "How soon?"
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