I'm all
I have a question for my linguistically astute and/or my socially ept readers (please note that one does not necessarily exclude the other).
What is the purpose of the phrase "I'm all" in the following conversation.
"Why did she get you in trouble?"
"I was eating some cheetos. I'm all, I was eating some cheetos."
Previously I had considered that maybe this phrase was introduced only when the speaker was embarrassed by what they had just said and so thought to make it less embarrassing by immediately mocking themselves. But in this particular instance, nearly all of the things the speaker said included "I'm all" and she even used it in relation to me, saying "You're all, checking your stomach."
Frankly, even though I have no idea what the linguistic purpose of this phrase is, I am exceedingly glad that it exists because this particular focus group tends to mumble.
Is my hearing going or do teenagers just mumble more than they used to?
What is the purpose of the phrase "I'm all" in the following conversation.
"Why did she get you in trouble?"
"I was eating some cheetos. I'm all, I was eating some cheetos."
Previously I had considered that maybe this phrase was introduced only when the speaker was embarrassed by what they had just said and so thought to make it less embarrassing by immediately mocking themselves. But in this particular instance, nearly all of the things the speaker said included "I'm all" and she even used it in relation to me, saying "You're all, checking your stomach."
Frankly, even though I have no idea what the linguistic purpose of this phrase is, I am exceedingly glad that it exists because this particular focus group tends to mumble.
Is my hearing going or do teenagers just mumble more than they used to?
Comments
At Language Log they've had several posts on the new quotatives, for example, http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/001644.html