ditto vs you know

ditto

intj
  • Used as an expression of agreement with what another person has said, or to indicate that what they have said equally applies to the person being addressed. 

adv
  • As said before, likewise. 

verb
  • To make a copy using a ditto machine. 

  • To repeat the aforesaid, the earlier action etc. 

noun
  • The ditto mark, 〃; a symbol, represented by two apostrophes, inverted commas, or quotation marks (" "), indicating that the item preceding is to be repeated. 

  • That which was stated before, the aforesaid, the above, the same, likewise. 

  • A suit of clothes of the same colour throughout. 

  • A duplicate or copy of a document, particularly one created by a spirit duplicator. 

  • A copy; an imitation. 

you know

intj
  • Used as a rhetorical question to confirm agreement, knowing or understanding at the end of a statement. 

  • Expression used to imply meaning, rather than say it, such as when a person is embarrassed. 

  • Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see you, know. 

  • Expression signifying a pause or hesitation. 

  • Used to introduce information. 

How often have the words ditto and you know occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )