different between mayo vs yayo

mayo

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?me?.o?/

Noun

mayo (countable and uncountable, plural mayos)

  1. Clipping of mayonnaise.
  2. (offensive, derogatory, ethnic slur, Internet slang) A white person.

Synonyms

  • (white person): see whitey

Anagrams

  • Amoy, Moya, moya

Aragonese

Etymology

From Latin M?ius.

Noun

mayo m

  1. May

Bikol Central

Pronunciation

IPA(key): /?ma.yo?/

Pronoun

mayò (Bikol Naga)

  1. (indefinite) nothing, none

Adjective

mayò

  1. absent
    Synonym: wara
    Antonyms: igwa, may

Dutch

Etymology

Clipping of mayonaise.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?ma?.jo?/
  • Hyphenation: ma?yo
  • Rhymes: -a?jo?

Noun

mayo f (plural mayo's)

  1. (informal) mayonnaise
    Synonym: mayonaise

Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish mayo

Noun

mayo

  1. May

Haitian Creole

Noun

mayo

  1. t-shirt

Ido

Noun

mayo (plural mayi)

  1. May (fifth month of the Gregorian calendar)

See also

  • (Gregorian calendar months) monati di la Gregoriala kalendario; januaro, februaro, marto, aprilo, mayo, junio, julio, agosto, septembro, oktobro, novembro, decembro (Category: io:Months)

Japanese

Romanization

mayo

  1. R?maji transcription of ??

Moose Cree

Alternative forms

[script needed]

Noun

mayo (transliteration needed)

  1. feces

Old Portuguese

Etymology

From Latin M?ius, from M?ia.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?majo/

Noun

mayo m

  1. May
    • ben uennas mayo
      Welcome, May!

Descendants

  • Galician: maio
  • Portuguese: maio
    • Guinea-Bissau Creole: mai
    • Kabuverdianu: mai, maiu
    • ? Tetum: maiu

Portuguese

Noun

mayo m (plural mayos)

  1. Obsolete spelling of maio

Spanish

Etymology

From Latin M?ius.

Pronunciation

Noun

mayo m (plural mayos)

  1. May

Derived terms

  • como agua de mayo

Descendants

  • ? Bikol Central: Mayo
  • ? Cebuano: Mayo
  • ? Karao: Mayo
  • ? Masbatenyo: Mayo
  • ? Tagalog: Mayo
  • ?? Classical Nahuatl: m?tztli mayo

See also

  • (Gregorian calendar months) mes del calendario gregoriano; enero, febrero, marzo, abril, mayo, junio, julio, agosto, septiembre, octubre, noviembre, diciembre (Category: es:Months)

Further reading

  • “mayo” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.

Turkish

Etymology

Borrowed from French maillot.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?m?j?]

Noun

mayo (definite accusative mayoyu, plural mayolar)

  1. swimsuit

Declension

See also

  • bikini
  • mayokini
  • deniz ?ortu

mayo From the web:

  • what mayo does subway use
  • what mayo does mcdonalds use
  • what mayo does burger king use
  • what mayonnaise made of
  • what mayo is keto
  • what mayonnaise does mcdonald's use
  • what mayo made of
  • what mayor cleaned up nyc


yayo

English

Alternative forms

  • yeyo, yay

Etymology

From Spanish llello.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?je?.o?/

Noun

yayo (uncountable)

  1. (US, slang) cocaine
    • 2004, Lil' Jon and the East Side Boyz (Jonathan Mortimer Smith), "Grand Finale" (rap song)
      We yayo experts, we been whippin' the yola / Since the crackas decided to take the coke from Coca-Cola.
    • 2009, Christine A. Nandi, The ABC's of Raising a Successful Student (page 7)
      They just spend their time sniffing up the yayo.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:cocaine.

Aragonese

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

yayo m (plural yayos)

  1. grandpa

References

  • Bal Palazios, Santiago (2002) , “yayo”, in Dizionario breu de a luenga aragonesa, Zaragoza, ?ISBN

Cebuano

Etymology

From yaya. Compare Spanish yayo.

Noun

yayo

  1. (often humorous) a male nanny; a manny

Verb

yayo

  1. (often humorous) to work or act as a manny

Spanish

Etymology

Unknown origin, perhaps from whimsical slang by youth. A prevailing theory, given the term's ultimate origin in Aragon and Catalan-speaking territories, is derivation from Catalan jajo (grandpa). It seems the first form generated was *jaja (grandma), from which the masculine form was derived. This would come from Catalan avia (grandmother) (from Vulgar Latin *avi?la, feminine diminutive of avus (grandfather)), and from juvenile palatalization would generate something like *ai?a. The common phenomenon of syllabic repetition in children's language (cf. papa, baba, etc.) would then cause the form jaja above, which would then be spread into Spanish and masculinized.

Otherwise, perhaps masculinized from Greek ?????? (giagiá, grandmother).

Pronunciation

Noun

yayo m (plural yayos)

  1. (chiefly Spain, Catalonia, informal) grandpa, pops

Related terms

  • yaya

Tagalog

Etymology

From Spanish yayo (grandpa). Compare Catalan iaio and Cebuano yayo.

Noun

yayo (feminine yaya)

  1. (often humorous) a male nanny; a manny

yayo From the web:

  • what's yayo mean
  • what's yayo in spanish
  • yayoi meaning
  • what does yayo mean in spanish
  • what is yayoi kusama known for
  • what inspired yayoi kusama
  • what is yayoi kusama art about
  • what influenced yayoi kusama
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