What is the difference between ya and yes?
ya | yes |
yea; yes
* 1806 , Jamieson, Pop. Ballads :
* 1894 , W. G. Stevenson, Puddin' iii. :
* 1896 , Ackworth, Clog Shop Chron. :
A word used to show agreement or acceptance.
A word used to indicate disagreement'' or ''dissent in reply to a negative statement.
Used to express pleasure, joy, or great excitement.
An affirmative expression; an answer that shows agreement or acceptance.
A vote of support or in favor/favour of something.
(colloquial) To agree with, to affirm, to approve.
(slang) To attempt to flatter someone by habitually agreeing.
Yes is a synonym of ya.
As interjections the difference between ya and yes
is that ya is yeah, yes while yes is used to express pleasure, joy, or great excitement.As nouns the difference between ya and yes
is that ya is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet while yes is an affirmative expression; an answer that shows agreement or acceptance.As a pronoun ya
is eye dialect of lang=en.As an adverb ya
is yea; yes.As an initialism YA
is youth Authority.As a particle yes is
a word used to show agreement or acceptance.As a verb yes is
to agree with, to affirm, to approve.ya
English
Etymology 1
Reduced form of you. Compare Dutch je, reduced/unstressed form of .Usage notes
Only used in unstressed contexts.Derived terms
* -cha * chewie on ya boot * -ja * love ya * see ya * smell ya later * there ya go * whaddayaSee also
* yerEtymology 2
Apparently from (etyl) ja and cognates in other Germanic languages; related to English yeah.Etymology 3
Variation of hyah.Etymology 4
From (etyl) ya, from (etyl) . More at yea.Alternative forms
* yaa, yaw, yah, yhaAdverb
(-)- 'Ya , wilt thou!' said Wallace, 'then tak thee that, [...]'
- Ya , auld man, ye ken fine ye wad like me.
- Ya , bur 'ee did, [...]
Etymology 5
From (etyl) .Anagrams
* ----yes
English
(yes and no)Particle
(-)- Yes , you are correct.
- Yes , you may go play outside now.
- Yes , sir, we have your package right here.
- It was not my fault we lost the race.
- Oh, yes , it was!
Synonyms
* Dialect or archaic forms: arr, ay, aye, yea, yassuh * Nautical, military, telecommunications: affirmative * Colloquial or slang forms: ya, yah, yeah, yeh, yep, yeppers, yup, yuppers, yus, ahuh, mhm, uh huh. * See also:Antonyms
* Standard form: no * Nautical, military, telecommunications: negative * Dialect or archaic forms: nay * Colloquial or slang forms: ixnay, nah, naw, nope * See also:Derived terms
* yes and amen * yes and no * yes-no questionUsage notes
* In Old and Middle English, yes'' was a more forceful affirmative than ''yea . * An example of yes used to disagree with a statement: the questions "You don’t want it, do you?" and "Don’t you want it?" are answered by "yes" if the respondent does want the item, and "no" if not. Many languages use a specific word for this purpose; see translation table above.Interjection
(en-interj)!- Our second goal of the match! Yes !
Antonyms
* noNoun
(en-noun)- Was that a yes?
- The workers voted on whether to strike, and there were thirty "yeses" and one "no".
Synonyms
* (answer that shows agreement or acceptance) aye, yea * (vote in support) aye, yeaAntonyms
* (answer that shows agreement or acceptance) no, nay * (vote in support) nayVerb
- Did he yes the veto?
- {{quote-magazine
