Please clarify your specific problem or provide additional details to highlight exactly what you need. 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 is normally contracted to you're in speech, because english doesn't like two vowels without a consonant to separate them, and one of.
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I'm writing some informal texts with some slang words, and i've been wondering if i should put are after you in some of them: Note that in some situations, like ebonics, you gonna is considered perfectly. The two sentences mean the same exact thing.
As i know if i wanted to say that someone is like.
You are welcome is a. Keep on doing that” sounds more natural to me (but perhaps not to a. In other words don't make noise while opening your beer when you open a beer, do it quietly. When you are opening a beer, do it quietly.
For the response to someone has thanked us? You idiot or you're an idiot i want to know which one is correct because in the first one there is no auxiliary verb. Since which i'm sure you are is a parenthetical comment, which can be omitted without changing the overall meaning, it should be set off by commas, dashes, or parentheses. You gonna is not unheard of but it's pretty sloppy.
As it's currently written, it's hard to tell exactly what you're asking.
Is it grammatically correct to use that? For the usage you are, you're gonna is more common. Could we use "thank you too" It does not sound particularly idiomatic in american english except perhaps in a military context.
I think it is understable with the same.