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ay ay

Used heavily in El Paso, Texas, USA and Ciudad JuΓ‘rez, Chihuahua, Mexico, "ay ay" is the repetition of the Spanish word "ay" which is equivalent to the interjection "oh" of the English language. When "ay" is said twice, i.e. "ay ay", it functions as an expression or acknowledgement of frustration, absurdity, disdain, and other "negative" feelings.

Some Mexican dude: I'm going to run for president.

Some Mexican chick: Ay ay.

by Paco Belmondo April 20, 2005

321πŸ‘ 35πŸ‘Ž


aye aye aye

an expression used when feeling someone has done a very idiotic thing.

"that boi just fell off a rock"
"aye aye aye"

by anexika August 22, 2006

63πŸ‘ 27πŸ‘Ž


ay ay

used in place of "whatever", "yeah right", "no way", or "nuh-uh"

ex1: -"Ey guey, i just won 1000 bucks!"
ex2: -"ay ay!"
ex1: -"Seriously, i did!"

by du bist ein Arschloch April 13, 2009

72πŸ‘ 18πŸ‘Ž


Aye Aye

Naval response indicating that an order has been received, is understood, and will be carried out immediately. In operational situations, this is usually shortened to simply "aye." In constrast to "Aye Aye sir," a response of "Yes Sir" usually indicates that the person understands but is contemplating performing the ordered task at a later time or date.

Ships Captain: "Lieutenant, I need those reports by 1400hrs."
Executive Officer: "Aye aye sir."

Officer of the Deck: "Helm, make your course 149."
Helmsman "Making course 149, aye."

by MaddogS October 1, 2003

513πŸ‘ 223πŸ‘Ž


ay ay ay

damn! codacious has some mighty fine abs! what a beast!

"AY AY AY! That's incredible, how are his abdominals so fine?!"

by hailerz52794 May 8, 2010

55πŸ‘ 47πŸ‘Ž


ay ay ay

this word describes a feeling of hurt for example when someone hits you, its commonly used by two people fala and shaikha when there playing call of duty or fortnite

fala: ay ay ay he hurt me or fala: ay ay ay he damaged me or shaikha: ay ay ay hes one shot

by fbfmr May 27, 2020

12πŸ‘ 9πŸ‘Ž


Aye Aye

Form one (Ei, Ai, Aye - by itself):

Ei (eventually changed to Ai in middle English and Aye in modern English)

Used to confirm which group has a majority in a decision. It should never be the reply of an individual unless that person is representing a group. An example would be when a group votes yes or no. When the vote is counted if more votes are yes then the person representing the group would respond "Ei". In reference to the modern British use of the word, when the Vikings used to raid the coastlines they would take people prisoner to become conscripts, the crew would vote to kill the person or make them part of the crew. If they voted to make them part of the crew the reply to the captain would be a single "Ei"

It is important to note the word does not mean "Yes".

It simply means the majoirty or a group confirms or agrees.

Form two (when the word is used twice together Aye-Aye):

Ei-Ei

This literally translates - Always; ever

What this means is the person making the reply is saying he is professing his devotion to a group forever.

This was the oath taking by conscripts when joining the Norse Vikings.

The course of events followed that the crew would vote to allow a prisoner to live and make them part of the crew by voting "Ei" to the captain. The prisoner could then swear an oath to become part of the crew by responding to the captain "Ei-Ei". Meaning the crew has voted and I pledge to them always.

But, the expression was also used on the Viking ships when replying to the captain and is a reference to the oath they had sworn.

This is where the modern, misuse of the word comes from. The slang is a result of Ei-Ei which was always used to agree with the captain and over time became confused to mean "Yes". In fact it does not mean that at all.

It means one agrees to join a group forever and nothing else.

It is interesting because this history directly relates to the common phrase Yi-Ei-Man

Aye Aye (Ei Ei)Captain, I will do my part.

by claymuir September 21, 2005

155πŸ‘ 93πŸ‘Ž