4.
– 8 WAYS TO SAY YES
Yes is a
very old word. It entered English before 900, and comes from the Old English
word gese loosely meaning "be it." Before the 1600s, yes was often
used only as an affirmative to a negative question, and yea was used as the
all-purpose way to say "yes."
This
archaism is still used as the formal response meaning "yes" in the
British House of Commons. It is also an accepted substitute for yea in a voice
vote in the US House of Representatives. When it first entered English, it was
often spelled I. Etymologists don't know where it came from, but it appeared
suddenly in the late 1500s and is still with us.
The word
indubitably, like many words with a negative prefix, comes from its internal
root, dubitable. Strangely though, the negative variation has always been more
popular than its root. They both come from the Latin word dubitare meaning
"to doubt."
The origin
of this common Americanism has been disputed, but it most likely came from the
1840 American presidential election in which politicos facetiously misspelled
all correct as oll korrect and abbreviated it OK. The alternately spelled okay
arose in the early 1900s. There are other apocryphal tales of it coming from
military jargon, but we'll leave those for another day.
Sure is
related to the Old French word of the same spelling which meant
"safe" or "secure." The word was used to mean
"safe" until the early 1500s. In the mid-1500s, sure started to take
on senses of "certainly" and "indubitably," which helped
introduce popular phrases such as "to be sure" and "for
sure" to English speakers. The common Americanism "sure thing"
arose in the 1800s.
This
common casual variation of yes arose in the early 20th century in America. It
is likely a drawled version of its formal cousin. Since the 1980s, its usage
has risen dramatically, more than three times its previous usage.
This
possible alternative spelling of yeah appeared in the 1960s, and may be a
variation on the word hooray. However, it remains the least used among our yes
alternatives.
If the aforementioned yes alternatives are too
run-of-the-mill for your tastes, try and how! This Americanism emerged in the
1800s and is used in a number of affirming ways, along the lines of "no
mistake, very much so!" "certainly!" and "you bet!"