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Definition 2024
Aya
aya
aya
English
Noun
aya (plural ayas)
- Alternative form of ayah
Etymology 2
Adverb
aya (not comparable)
- (archaic, dialect, New England) Yes; yea; aye.
- 1938, Thornton Wilder, Our Town: A Play in Three Acts, Coward-McCann and Samuel French (1965), ISBN 0743223136:
- “The date is May 7, 1901, just before dawn. (COCK CROW offstage.) Aya, just about.”
- 2001, David McCullough, John Adams, Simon & Schuster (2001), ISBN 0573613494:
- “And for all her reading, her remarkable knowledge of English poetry and literature, she was never to lose certain countrified Yankee patterns of speech, saying 'Canady' for Canada, as an example, using 'set' for sit, or the old New England 'aya,' for yes.”
- 1938, Thornton Wilder, Our Town: A Play in Three Acts, Coward-McCann and Samuel French (1965), ISBN 0743223136:
Jumaytepeque
Noun
aya
References
- Chris Rogers, The Use and Development of the Xinkan Languages
Malay
Pronunciation
- (Johor-Selangor) IPA(key): /ajə/
- (Riau-Lingga) IPA(key): /ajə/
- Rhymes: -ajə, -jə, -ə
- Rhymes: -ə
Noun
aya
- father (male parent)
Synonyms
Maybrat
Noun
aya
References
- A Grammar of Maybrat: A Language of the Bird's Head Peninsula, Papua Province, Indonesia (2007)
Turkish
Etymology 1
From Old Turkic aya, from Proto-Turkic *hāya, *āja (“palm (of hand)”).
Noun
aya (definite accusative ayayı, plural ayalar)
Etymology 2
Noun
aya
- accusative singular of ay
Yupiltepeque
Etymology
Cognate to Jumaytepeque aya, Jutiapa aiya, Chiquimulilla aʔyāj, Sinacantán ayala.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /aja/
Noun
aya
See also
- jumu (“man”)
References
- Vocabularios de la lengua xinca de Sinacantan (1868, D. Juan Gavarrete)
- Chris Rogers, The Use and Development of the Xinkan Languages