Maybe it is my age (nearly 34 – getting up there, I know). Perhaps it is my ethnic background (I happen to be of the ruling minority – white males). Maybe I’m a bit stuffy or stuck up (I try to be a tolerant individual), but no matter what, “Where you at?” will never be a phrase that I can picture leaving my mouth. It is simply the epitome of improper grammar. You don’t need to be an English scholar to find the faults, but it lacks any form of verb and ends with a preposition (last I checked those are big no-nos of basic sentence structure).
So when I got asked the previosuly noted question by a co-worker over the phone, the only thing the kept me from hanging my head and sighing was the fact that I was attempting to park my car at the time. Upon pointing out the fault and answering the implied question, snickering from my passenger elicitsa follow-up of “Who you with?”
Day by day I make progress. Meanwhile my 5-year-old daughter is fluidly integrating words like apparently, conveniently, and recently into her vocabulary. So I have some points of solace.