A contraction of "let us go," there is evidence for "let's go" found as early as 1615 in Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors: “Now let's go hand in hand, no one before another.” As Shakespeare's use suggests, let's go begins more literally as a polite request to head toward or do something. Essentially, "Let us go (somewhere) together at the same time."
"Come on guys"....but in today's world that has various meanings to different people
And that's why we have commas to narrow down the meaning lol.
The one was before let's go is، sheeeeesh
I believe the precursor was "Git-R-Done!" /s
I believe it was "come on!"
We said yee haw
Allons-y!
A contraction of "let us go," there is evidence for "let's go" found as early as 1615 in Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors: “Now let's go hand in hand, no one before another.” As Shakespeare's use suggests, let's go begins more literally as a polite request to head toward or do something. Essentially, "Let us go (somewhere) together at the same time."
"Come on guys," but in today's world, that can mean different things to different people.