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Elsa
I found a word "aye" always be used in the film . Can it be used instead of 'yes'?
I found a word "aye" always be used in the film <Pirates of the Caribbean>.
Can it be used instead of 'yes'?
30 juin 2010 01:12
Réponses · 6
2
Alternatively, if you are ever in Scotland it is widely used and understood as a synonym for yes. In fact, I often use it myself.
30 juin 2010
1
If you use "aye", you would need to adopt the other conventions that go with it (eg. using "nay" for "no", etc). It wouldn't work as a substitute by itself.
For example:
Q: "Are you managing work OK?"
A: "Aye, I'm managing it very well, thankyou." --> Too strange! "Aye" is out-of-place here, against the regular polite English.
A better (pirate!) answer is: "Aye, that I be. 'Tis a task safe within me humble abilities, thankin' ye."
Don't forget the accent. ;)
1 juillet 2010
1
It is part of the way that English speakers portray pirates. It is how a pirate says yes. The navy also uses it in the phrase "aye aye sir." So I see it as a way of saying yes on boats, yet it can still be used in normal conversation, but it will make you sound like a pirate, a Scottish person, or a person from history.
30 juin 2010
1
aye = yea
i use it with my friends =)
we are old-fashioned dudes
30 juin 2010
1
Aye is a very old fashioned term meaning yes. No I would not use it unless you were an actor in a pirate movie.
30 juin 2010
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Elsa
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais, Allemand
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Allemand
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