Opposite of no
Person 1: Do you want to go play Fortnite
Person 2 :YES
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Sometimes used when the person is to lazy to say "All of them"
Me on Whisper: The Internet ruined the Shrek movies
Guy on Whisper replying: Shrek ruined Shrek
Me: Which one? 2nd? 3rd? 4th?
Guy: Yes
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When yes is followed by a period, it is a sarcastic way of answering a stupid question and/or a way to answer a question you don't want to give an answer to.
You: hey you want to hang out?
Friend: sure where do you want to meet?
You: how about IHOP?
Friend: hey where are we hanging out?
You: yes.
Person: hey who are you going to vote for in the next election
You: yes.
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"Hey man, you wanna go to the game?"
"Yes."
"Wait, really?"
"Hell no, m8, gtfo with that shit."
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'Ye' in 'Ye Olde ....' is a representation of 'the' and is pronounced 'the' and always has been. The 'y' that is used in print replaces the archaic 'thorn' character, which looked somewhat similar and stood for what we now write as 'th'. In fact the 'e' in our 'the' was written in those days as a superscript following the 'thorn' character.
'Ye' as in 'Ye Olde Shoppe' is the most well-known example and the point is actually about how it is pronounced. 'Ye,' except when it is the second person plural pronoun, means 'the' and is pronounced as we pronounce 'the'.
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