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  1. When is it appropriate to use "Yeah" and "Yep" as variants of the …

    Looking at the definitions given for yeah, yeh, yep, or yup, all those words are defined as exclamation & noun nonstandard spelling of yes, representing informal pronunciation. Looking …

  2. Is "yay or nay" an acceptable alternative to "yea or nay"?

    Is "yay or nay" an acceptable alternative to "yea or nay"? I have seen it several times in recent weeks, enough to make me wonder whether it is an emerging usage or just a common typo.

  3. Difference yea/nay and yes/no - four-form system [duplicate]

    So, my brother is watching on tv a vote a in the American Congress. He says that the members are asked to vote with yea/nay (I have heard that from the Chamber of Commons in the UK as …

  4. Something is "yay" big - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    The expression is actually (or originally) " yea big " or " yea high " where yea essentially means this. Wiktionary has an entry for yea: Thus, so (now often accompanied by a hand gesture) …

  5. pronunciation - How do you spell "Aye Yai Yai" - English Language ...

    Jan 31, 2012 · The phrase that's spoken when someone is hand-wringing about a thorny problem. Speaker One: Uh-oh -- we have to reformat ALL THE DOCUMENTS! Speaker Two: Aye Yai …

  6. etymology - What is the history and regional dispersion of the ...

    Dec 10, 2016 · Yes is the same word as yea which is the same in germanic. It's a very old word. Being one of the most used words in the English language, yea probably was said as yep and …

  7. didn't finish…yet" versus "…haven't finished…yet"

    May 11, 2011 · Per Difference between 'haven't …yet' and 'didn't… yet', the presence of "yet" at the end of both these alternatives makes a huge difference to how "acceptable" they are. So …

  8. history - If the letter J is only 400–500 years old, was there a J ...

    Jan 29, 2014 · Thus, the Greek spelling for "Jesus" was Ιησους, pronounced something like "Yeh-SOOS", and the Latin likewise was Iesus. Subsequently, in the Latin alphabet the letter J was …

  9. etymology - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Jan 3, 2013 · I am curious as to why "nay" replaces the simple unequivocal "no" in the context of voting. My research in Merriam-Webster tells me that "nay" means "no" (not the other way …

  10. "Hear hear" or "here here" - English Language & Usage Stack …

    Dec 13, 2010 · Which one is it really: hear hear or here here? Where does the saying really come from?