hey
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English hey, hei, also without h- in ey, from Old English *hē, ēa (interjection), attested as first element in hēlā, ēalā (“O!, alas!, oh!, lo!”). Cognate with Dutch hé, hei (“hi, hey”), German hei (“hey, wow”), Danish and Swedish hej (“hello, hey”), Faroese hey (“hey, hello”), Old Norse, Icelandic and Norwegian hei (“hey”), Polish hej (“hey, hello”), Romanian hei, Russian эй (ej, “hey”); see heigh. Probably a natural expression, as may be inferred from its presence with similar meaning in many other unrelated languages: for example, Burmese ဟေး (he:), Finnish hei, Unami hè, and Mandarin 哎 (āi), and various sound-alikes as Ancient Greek εἶα (eîa) and Latin eia, eho, Sanskrit हे (he). See also hello.
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From French haie (“hedge”), with reference to the weaving patterns used in hedgelaying. Doublet of hedge and quay.
hey (plural heys)
See he.
hey (plural heys)
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
hey
From Old Norse hey, from Proto-Germanic *hawją.
hey n (genitive singular heys, nominative plural hey)
From Old English hīġ, hīeġ, from Proto-West Germanic *hawi, from Proto-Germanic *hawją (“hay”).
hey (uncountable)
From Old English *hē, ēa. See English hey for more.
hey
hey
hey (uncountable)
hey
hey
hey (third-person singular simple present heyeth, present participle heyende, heyynge, first-/third-person singular past indicative and past participle heyed)
hey (comparative heyer, superlative heyest)
hey
hey
Unadapted borrowing from English hey.
¡hey!
hey
hey
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