Do Canadians end all their sentences with 'eh' ?

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
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'What I do hear a lot of is "y'know". I saw a interview with a hockey player (amateur) the other day and I swear about every 5th word was "y'know".'

Recently I saw in an interview the smartest woman in the world who also happens to be the wife of the smartest man in the world, Michelle Obama.

She uttered not a single sentence without saying 'you know' at least twice.

I once went through a public speaking course and was videotaped. I couldn't believe how many times I said 'ya know'. It's a hard one to break if prone to it, and it takes concentration to not say it. Ya know? lol
 

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
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I once heard it explained that eh was a native term picked up by white settlers.

I have no verification for this and I can't even remember how I came by hearing it.

I use eh once in awhile. Usually to make sure somebody has actually heard me. If I'm talking and the person is looking at me I don't (think) I say it. At least not as conciously as when they're not looking and I say eh at the end.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
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I once went through a public speaking course and was videotaped. I couldn't believe how many times I said 'ya know'. It's a hard one to break if prone to it, and it takes concentration to not say it. Ya know? lol

I did the same type of course and I was surprised that I DIDN'T say "ya know" or "ummm" after viewing my presentation on video.
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
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I use it once in a while. Definitely not on every sentence thankfully... I am capable of coherent speech.... lol... but in the occasional relaxed conversation it will sneak it's way in.
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
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I did the same type of course and I was surprised that I DIDN'T say "ya know" or "ummm" after viewing my presentation on video.

The key is to believe that your audience has enough of an attention span to tolerate punctuation in your speech. We seem to be of the idea when public speaking that we need to say it fast and fill every second of time with talking, when in fact, slowing down and allowing pauses for breathing and thought makes for a much more pleasurable speech.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
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The key is to believe that your audience has enough of an attention span to tolerate punctuation in your speech. We seem to be of the idea when public speaking that we need to say it fast and fill every second of time with talking, when in fact, slowing down and allowing pauses for breathing and thought makes for a much more pleasurable speech.

Is that why all the ladies were smiling at me? I thought it was just me. ;-)
 

AnnaG

Hall of Fame Member
Jul 5, 2009
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I once heard it explained that eh was a native term picked up by white settlers.

I have no verification for this and I can't even remember how I came by hearing it.

I use eh once in awhile. Usually to make sure somebody has actually heard me. If I'm talking and the person is looking at me I don't (think) I say it. At least not as conciously as when they're not looking and I say eh at the end.
From the online etymological dictionary:
"eh": 1560s as an exclamation of sorrow; with questions, from 1773.
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
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Is that why all the ladies were smiling at me? I thought it was just me. ;-)

If you came off well spoken and not nervous I'm sure it's part of why they were smiling at you. I'd bet the other part is your looks though. ;-)
 

Johnnny

Frontiersman
Jun 8, 2007
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Third rock from the Sun
Hello everyone, I'm from Belgium and I'm doing a survey on a Canadian stereotype for an assignement.
The stereotype I found is that all Canadians end all their sentences with 'eh'
Is that true ?
Thanks a lot for helping me! :smile:

i say it without realizing it sometimes, and i even start sentences with eh