• Ain't

    Pronunciation

    • IPA: /eɪnt/
    • Rhymes: -eɪnt

    Origin

    According to Etymology Online, the term was first attested in 1706 as am not, and it was used with that sense until the early 19th century, when it began to be used as a generic contraction for are not, is not, etc. in the Cockney. It was then "popularized by representations of this in Dickens, etc., which led to the word being banished from correct English."

    Etymonline

    The shift from to parallels a similar change some dialects made to can't. In other dialects, the pronunciation shifted to , and the spelling aren't, when used to mean “am not”, is due to the fact that both words are pronounced in some non-rhotic dialects. Historically, ain't was present in many dialects of the English language, but not in the southeastern England dialect that became the standard, where it is only found in the construction ain't I.

    As a contraction of have not and has not, ain't derives from the earlier form han't, which shifted from to , and underwent h-dropping in most dialects.

    Full definition of ain't

    Contraction

    1. (dialectal or informal) Am not.
    2. (dialectal or informal) Are not, aren’t; is not, isn’t; am not.
      • 1885, Gilbert and Sullivan, :We figure in lively paint:Our attitude’s queer and quaint —You’re wrong if you think it ain’t, oh!
      • 1953, Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Hound Dog (song):You ain't nothin' but a hound dog.
      • 1964, Bob Dylan, It Ain't Me Babe:It ain't me you're looking for.
    3. (dialectal, informal) Have not, haven’t; has not, hasn’t, when used as an auxiliary.
      • 2006, Bob Bylan, Nettie Moore:Got a pile of sins to pay for and I ain't got time to hide
        I'd walk through a blazing fire, baby, if I knew you was on the other side.
    © Wiktionary