pronoun, dialect or informal, you (usu. more than one person) (COD)
“You guys skated across, and took the plank with youse.”
“To save Tom coming back, we can take youse home. We’ll take youse up.”
“Teacher might say, ‘You guys didn’t do nothing when youse got out of school?’ No, we didn’t do nothing. We went home.”
“Oh my gosh, you know. Well you, sometimes youse look around and say, ‘Well if the boat does go over, what am I gonna grab’, you know? You got a little kid too, you know? Or maybe more than one.”
“Gee, would youse have a coffee?”
“Dad, he rigged up a dump rake behind the tractor with a rope on it. Maybe youse had one of them too? I don’t know.”
“He said, ‘I got a chain there’. He said, ‘I’ll pull youse up’. And so he hooked on us and backed us up to the top of the hill.”
“So have youse got more connections that you gotta do on the Island?”
“Am I keeping youse?”
“Did youse have a visit with Tom?”
“I was talking to her and told her youse might be up around, so.”
“His neighbour, did youse interview him?”
“Who youse gotta go see next?”
“Sorry to keep youse waiting.”
“And finally, she says, ‘I’m going downtown too’. She says, ‘Come on. I’ll take youse and show you where to get off’. Like they’re just like ants when they get on and off those places. You think Toronto’s busy.”
“The dock people, when you’re going into the lock, you hand in the line. You just hand it to him, and then he’s feeding it out through the chock. They call them chocks where you tie your boat up to. And then when you get to the bottom, youse kind of get out of the road, and they throw it down on the deck.”