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BNC: 1801 COCA: 10386

aye

2 ENTRIES FOUND:
1 aye adverb
also ay /ˈaɪ/
1 aye
adverb
also ay /ˈaɪ/
Learner's definition of AYE
: 1yes 1used especially in Scotland and in the language of sailors.尤用于苏格兰及水手语言
used to indicate a spoken yes vote(口头表决时说)同意,赞成
2 aye noun
also ay
plural ayes
2 aye
noun
also ay
plural ayes
Learner's definition of AYE
[count]
: a yes vote赞成票
compare 2nay, yea
BNC: 1801 COCA: 10386

aye

1 of 3

adverb (1)

variants or less commonly ay
: yes
aye, aye, sir

aye

2 of 3

noun

variants or less commonly ay
plural ayes
: an affirmative vote or voter
the ayes have it

aye

3 of 3

adverb (2)

variants or less commonly ay
: always, continually, ever
love that will aye endure W. S. Gilbert

Word History

Etymology

Adverb (1)

of uncertain origin

Note: Perhaps a univerbation in Middle English of the interjection ah ah entry 1 and the affirmative ye yea entry 1 with shift of stress; however, Middle English evidence for such a phrase is lacking.

Noun

noun derivative of aye entry 1

Adverb (2)

Middle English ay, borrowed from Old Norse ei, ey, æ "ever, forever," going back to Germanic *aiwim or *aiwom (whence also Old English ā "always, ever, eternally," Old Saxon io, eo "ever, at any time, always," Old High German io, eo "on every occasion, always," Gothic ni … aiw "never"), accusative forms, used adverbially, of *aiwis or *aiwos "time, eternity" (whence Old Frisian ēwe "eternity," Old Saxon and Old High German ēwa, Middle Dutch ēwe, ee "age, eternity"), going back to Indo-European *h2ei̯-u̯o- "eternity, age," whence also Latin aevus, aevum "time as the medium in which events occur, age, lifetime"; also, from a stem h2ei̯-u̯-on-, Greek aiṓn "lifetime, long period of time, age"; and from a u-stem with ablaut and shifting stress *h2ói̯-u-, *h2i̯-éu̯-s, Sanskrit ā́yuḥ "vital force," Avestan āiiu (nominative), yaoš (genitive) "lifetime"

Note: In Middle English the outcome of the Old Norse word has fallen together with the outcome of Old English -æg (as in dæg "day"). Old English ā continued into Middle English as o, oo, and the two words may occur combined as "(for) ay and oo," meaning "forever." For incorporation of ā into compounds in Old English see aught entry 1, no entry 1, naught entry 1, each entry 1. Overlapping in formation with this Germanic etymon is a homonymous root evident in Old English ǣ "law, marriage," Old Frisian ē, ēwe, iōwe "law," Old Saxon ēo, ēu, Old High German ēwa, ēwī "law, command, covenant" (see echt). The two roots have been taken by some as identical, with the sense "law" a concretization of the sense "what lasts, what always exists."

First Known Use

Adverb (1)

1576, in the meaning defined above

Noun

1589, in the meaning defined above

Adverb (2)

13th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of aye was in the 13th century
BNC: 1801 COCA: 10386

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