Jan 17, 2023ย ยท In the dictionary, bad (comparative badder, superlative baddest) (especially North American English, slang) good; excellent Say, your friend has just made a very beautiful dress. And โ€ฆ

For the usage "you are," "You're gonna" is more common. "You gonna" is not unheard of but it's pretty sloppy. Note that in some situations, like ebonics, "you gonna" is considered perfectly natural if not โ€ฆ

Sep 22, 2017ย ยท There is no difference. You are is normally contracted to you're in speech, because English doesn't like two vowels without a consonant to separate them, and one of them gets deleted. โ€ฆ

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The two sentences mean the same exact thing. However, as a native English speaker in the US, I would absolutely say it's far more common to hear You're welcome. You are welcome is a phrase I've said โ€ฆ

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