gwine
English
Etymology
Phonetic rendition of going; compare Gullah gwine.
This particular form apparently results from the vocalic sequence in going (Early Modern English /ˈɡoː.ɪŋ/, /ˈɡoː.ɪn/) coalescing into a diphthong that was identified with reflexes of Middle English /ui̯/, which developed into /waɪ/ in some dialects; compare English traditional dialect pronunciations of point and toil as /ˈpwaɪnt/, /ˈtwaɪl/ (see twile). In some dialects, Middle English /ui̯/ instead developed into /aɪ/, resulting in the form gine; compare bile (“boil”), heist, rile.
Verb
gwine
- (archaic, especially African-American Vernacular) present participle of go
- 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe, chapter 21, in Uncle Tom's Cabin:
- Well, I want spectin nothin; only Sam, he's a gwine to de river with some colts, and he said I could go long with him; so I jes put my things together.
- 1921, Emilie Benson Knipe, Alden Arthur Knipe, Diantha's Quest, New York: The Macmillan company, page 78:
- “Come on, you Snowflake,” he called, cracking his long whip. “You're gwine to get your sugar, but you-all is gwine to earn it first.”
Usage notes
- Though this word is especially associated with traditional African-American Vernacular English, it was also found in the speech of white US Southerners and New Englanders and speakers of the traditional dialects of Southern England.
Descendants
- Gullah: gwine
Gullah
Verb
gwine
- present participle of go
- 2017 August 10, “The World of Gullah”, in Fodor's Travel (travel guide; overall work in English), El Segundo, California: Fodor's Travel, retrieved 12 August 2020:
- If oonuh ent kno weh oonuh dah gwine, oonuh should kno weh oonuh come f'um
- If you don't know where you're going, you should know where you've come from.
- going to
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