hey

English dictionary entry

Meanings

intj
  1. An exclamation to get attention.
  2. A protest or reprimand.
  3. An expression of surprise.
  4. An informal greeting, similar to hi.
  5. A request for repetition or explanation; an expression of confusion.
  6. Used as a tag question, to emphasise what goes before or to request that the listener express an opinion about what has been said.
  7. A meaningless beat marker or extra, filler syllable in song lyrics.
verb
  1. To greet with a "hey"
noun
  1. A choreographic figure in which three or more dancers weave between one another, passing by left and right shoulder alternately.
noun
  1. Alternative spelling of he (“Hebrew letter”).
name
  1. A surname.

Pronunciation

/heɪ/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Pvanp7-hey.wav en-us-hey.ogg EN-AU ck1 hey.ogg

Word forms

hey hay heigh heys heying heyed

Etymology

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.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.