yayo

See also: yayō

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Spanish llello.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈjeɪ.oʊ/

Noun

yayo (uncountable)

  1. (US, slang) cocaine
    • 1983, Deborah Harry and Giorgio Moroder (lyrics), “Rush, Rush”, in Scarface, Universal Music Publishing Group, performed by Debbie Harry:
      Rush-rush to the yayo; buzz-buzz give me yayo.
    • 2004, Lil' Jon and the East Side Boyz (Jonathan Mortimer Smith), "Grand Finale" (rap song)
      We yayo experts, we been whippin' the yola / Since the crackas decided to take the coke from Coca-Cola.
    • 2009, Christine A. Nandi, The ABC's of Raising a Successful Student (page 7)
      They just spend their time sniffing up the yayo.

Synonyms


Aragonese

Noun

yayo m (plural yayos)

  1. grandpa

References


Cebuano

Etymology

From yaya. Compare Spanish yayo.

Noun

yayo

  1. (often humorous) a male nanny; a manny

Verb

yayo

  1. (often humorous) to work or act as a manny

Spanish

Etymology

Unknown origin, perhaps from whimsical slang by youth. A prevailing theory, given the term's ultimate origin in Aragon and Catalan-speaking territories, is derivation from Catalan jajo (grandpa). It seems the first form generated was *jaja (grandma), from which the masculine form was derived. This would come from Catalan avia (grandmother) (from Vulgar Latin *aviōla, feminine diminutive of avus (grandfather)), and from juvenile palatalization would generate something like *ai̯a. The common phenomenon of syllabic repetition in children's language (cf. papa, baba, etc.) would then cause the form jaja above, which would then be spread into Spanish and masculinized.

Otherwise, perhaps masculinized from Greek γιαγιά (giagiá, grandmother).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈɟ͡ʝaɟ͡ʝo/, [ˈɟ͡ʝaʝo]

Noun

yayo m (plural yayos)

  1. (chiefly Spain, Catalonia, informal) grandpa, pops
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