A exclamation made when an accounting teacher feels you are disrespecting his class. When Ay man is abused, the teacher will likely go to Come-on man. Once you leave accounting one you are obligated to respect the class more, although the class becomes even less respectable. If you are an athlete, you are immune from being ay manned.
by Eymanrespectthisshit October 04, 2008
Ay Man is what people use to get people's attention..variation of Hey Man
other variations may be:
B Man (bro man)
C Man (Semen)
D Man (THE Man)
F Man
G-Man
H-Man
Iman
J-Man
K man (ok man)
N-Man
o man (oh man)
p man (pac man)
Q-man
T-Man
u man (that's you man)
X Men
Y man (Why man?)
Z-man....
other variations may be:
B Man (bro man)
C Man (Semen)
D Man (THE Man)
F Man
G-Man
H-Man
Iman
J-Man
K man (ok man)
N-Man
o man (oh man)
p man (pac man)
Q-man
T-Man
u man (that's you man)
X Men
Y man (Why man?)
Z-man....
by big jens chisel July 29, 2006
Geordie way of enthusiastically saying yes! Everyone is "man" even if you identify as a penguin! the why eye is like a "well duh obviously" way of saying yes!
by Charlxxe January 04, 2020
Well I man derives from the Geordie term wey aye man generally referring to a shocking subject which causes an individual to questions ones validity of a claim as geordies have evolved the term has changed slightly using well instead of wey
For instance: I went shopping today and some girl offered me a blow job; general Geordie response "well aye man"
by the dictorian October 22, 2013
Correct spelling would be Yi-Ei-Man
The term is directly related to the terms Aye and Aye Aye
It was a phrase that the people of the north of the Britians, developed as a sort of war cry when Vikings were attacking their coastlines.
The Britians used to yell the words "Yi-Ei-Man" to the attacking Vikings, which mean literally "No, Always, Man"
The phrase was intending to imply that the Britains would never join the Vikings crews and would fight to the death down to the last man.
In modern times the words have completely lost all meaning and the phrase is just a sort of slang way of agreeing to something - ironically exactly the opposite of what it should be.
The term is directly related to the terms Aye and Aye Aye
It was a phrase that the people of the north of the Britians, developed as a sort of war cry when Vikings were attacking their coastlines.
The Britians used to yell the words "Yi-Ei-Man" to the attacking Vikings, which mean literally "No, Always, Man"
The phrase was intending to imply that the Britains would never join the Vikings crews and would fight to the death down to the last man.
In modern times the words have completely lost all meaning and the phrase is just a sort of slang way of agreeing to something - ironically exactly the opposite of what it should be.
by claymuir September 21, 2005
Goin down pivi, oh aye man
by biggarethhouse March 31, 2004
by Youngjiggyjus August 13, 2017