Yet is a proper English word. Yet is not a slang word.
Yes, but it is a slang word, or idiom, and not considered proper English.
"Gotten" is considered standard English in American English, while it is less common in British English where "got" is preferred. It is not considered slang in either dialect.
adj. correct; suitable; just; complete (Slang)
No, "spelled" is not a slang word. It is a proper English word that means to write or say the letters of a word in the correct order.
The English translation of the Spanish word "pata" is "paw" or "leg."
It is slang in only the spoken word. It cannot be used in proper English. As slang, and has to be translated into English before it can be categorized: it means "what will . . . ".What is an interrogative pronoun.Will is part of the future tense of a verb, as in will go, will find.You should always use "What will" in school, not the slang.
No Its not a word...Its just a common slang which is being used by ignorant english speaker
No. It is dialect and a combination of two words "you" and "all", but it is not a real word. I beg to differ. "Y'all" is just as real a word as "ain't" -- it's just that neither are proper English! It's in the online dictionary.
"Jud" is not a widely recognized word in English. It may be a proper noun or slang term in certain contexts or languages.
There is no English slang word named ho-la.
The English slang word for stubborn is "bullheaded."
It is the Yiddish word for a woman who is not Jewish. It is slang in English, but it is not slang in Yiddish.