by Dexter007 December 9, 2020
by bolty boy April 6, 2020
Used to express great shock and is an expression originating from West Africa mainly Nigerian heritage
Person 1: I have teeeea
Person 2: spilll
Person 1: I saw ….. from church with a bump and she was holding hands with this guy
Person 2: Ye! Do her parents know?
Person 2: spilll
Person 1: I saw ….. from church with a bump and she was holding hands with this guy
Person 2: Ye! Do her parents know?
by Igbo.princess July 15, 2021
'Ye' in 'Ye Olde ....' is a representation of 'the' and is pronounced 'the' and always has been. The 'y' that is used in print replaces the archaic 'thorn' character, which looked somewhat similar and stood for what we now write as 'th'. In fact the 'e' in our 'the' was written in those days as a superscript following the 'thorn' character.
'Ye' as in 'Ye Olde Shoppe' is the most well-known example and the point is actually about how it is pronounced. 'Ye,' except when it is the second person plural pronoun, means 'the' and is pronounced as we pronounce 'the'.
by par2 September 22, 2017
by ArchMan December 12, 2015
by IronPrime9 April 2, 2017