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yo    音标拼音: [j'o]
int. 鼓励;加油


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  • Whats the origin of “yo”? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In the Neapolitan dialect "guaglione" (pronounced guahl-YO-nay) signified a young man The chiefly unlettered immigrants shortened that to guahl-YO, which they pronounced whal-YO That was inevitably further shortened to yo The common greeting among young Italian-American males was "Hey, whal-YO!", and then simply, "Yo!" And so it remains today
  • Can Yo be used to end a conversation? - English Language Usage . . .
    Yo, just do your job! YO!, here Yo is being used at the end of the sentence as a declarative or imperative exclamation, but my question is can "Yo" also be used alone to end a conversation
  • american english - Whats the semantic content of the word yo in the . . .
    Yo (interjection) : A greeting or said to get someone's attention; hey: Yo, dudes and babes! - [1859+; even though yo and yoho are very old utterances, found by 1420, the recent revival of yo as a primarily black interjection has spawned comment; Ernest Paolino of Philadelphia, indignant because a New York writer had claimed the syllable for New York, recalls it from the 1930s as shortening of
  • meaning - Does ‘Yo’ in ‘yo mama joke’ actually refer to “Your” mother . . .
    11 "Yo mama" does mean "your mother " The "yo mama" jokes are more or less humorous insults, used as a sort of verbal sparring on the street
  • Whats the origin of saying yoo hoo! to get someones attention?
    The Oxford English Dictionary dates yoo-hoo to 1924, as noted by the American Dialect Society, and compares it to yo-ho, originally a nautical phrase also sometimes used in yo-heave-ho Their first documented use of yo-ho is from 1769 in William Falconer's An universal dictionary of the marine: Hola-ho, a cry which answers to yoe-hoe Yo-ho derives from two interjections Yo: an exclamation of
  • What is the difference between a dieresis and an umlaut?
    @TRiG — From what I can see looking at various online sources, "dieresis" "umlaut" can refer to the linguistic phenomena, as well as the diacritic mark used in its particular context "Trema" refers to the diacritic mark used in either context So either is accurate, so long as you don't refer to the dots in an umlaut as a "dieresis" or vice versa
  • pronunciation - How do you spell Aye Yai Yai - English Language . . .
    The Yiddish "oy oy oy", the Spanish "ai ai ai" and the Chinese "ai ai ai" or "ai yo" are all minor variations on this theme (and pronounced distinctly) I've never heard this in straight up American English Maybe you can elaborate on exactly what you are talking about
  • grammaticality - on the link, in the link, or at the link . . .
    Which is the correct usage: Follow the instructions on the link mentioned above Follow the instructions in the link mentioned above Follow the instructions at the link mentioned above
  • Did English ever have a formal version of you?
    Yes it did, and the formal version was (drumroll, please ) you In Early Modern English, thou was the singular and you was the plural Plural you came to be used as a polite form of address (similar to the French vous, which is also used for the plural), but over time this polite form became more and more common, eventually displacing the singular thou altogether This explains a
  • What do we call the “rd” in “3ʳᵈ” and the “th” in “9ᵗʰ”?
    Our numbers have a specific two-letter combination that tells us how the number sounds For example 9th 3rd 301st What do we call these special sounds?





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