ya, yare, yere
[Atlantic (Hancock 1969:64); from here by regular loss of /h/ and /r/; the /y/ is found in 17th century Brit. dial. DJE; also US dial. ...
Yabby
[probably from RABBY ] n. 1. a folk-tale character: 1895 O, B' Yabby, knock dis ting fah me (Edwards 88). (Eleu., Inagua)
2. another name ...
yakee
[cf. AKEE] n. a fruit, probably AKEE : 1966 Put on the boiler, boil a little yakee (Crowley 69). (Nassau)
39. akee, ackee, achee ...
yaller
/yála/ adj. 1. [Atlantic (Hancock 1969:46); a dial, pronunciation in Brit. (EDD) and US (ADD)] yellow: 1936 D' yeller house wid d' blue winder (Dupuch ...
Yankee
[OED, applied occasionally to a ship) n. a cargo vessel from the United States: 1977 American cargo vessels, known as Yankees (AIbury 53). (Nassau) ...
yard
[Car.; OED, a barnyard; an enclosed area with grass and trees adjoining a house (now dial. and US)] n. 1. the area around a dwelling, ...
youth boy
[ Atlantic (Collymore,CCD); also US dial. South (Brown 1976:36); cf. also Haitian gason lakou (lit. boy + yard) idem TDKF] n. a gardener/handyman: 1832 Employed ...
yard boy
[for working in the YARD] n. work clothes: They mussy dead poor, cause I see her does wear her yard clothes and all to church ...
yard toilet
n. a outside privy: Yinna so bad off till y'all got yard toilet (Nassau). (Gen.) ...
yarns
[from the mass noun] count n., pl. strands of yarn: 1977 Old rope was taken apart and the good was spun into yarns for rope-making ...
ye
/yiy/ [OED now in all uses dial. arch., or poet. cf. US dial. /ya/ ADD] obj. pron. (second person) you: I'll give it to ye ...
yeah!
[cf. US Black yeah! exclamation of approval (Gold)] intj. hello! (said with special intonation and often an accompanying guesture) (youth slang). (Black) ...
year-'ole
/yir owl/ [cf. OED year ear obs. → 16th century, also Brit. dial. West year-hole idem EDD] n. ear. (Exuma, White) ...
yellow bird
[OED, DAB different sp.] n. a bird, Dendroica petechia: 1972 (Paterson 137). = CHIP-CHIP (Gen.) ...
yellow-breast
(Exuma, Nassau); yellow-chest (Eleu.) [from its plumage] n. a bird, the bananaquit (Coereba flaveola): 1977 (Albury 27). BAHAMA SPARROW, BANANA BIRD 1, CHEE CHEE, JIN1Y ...
yellow folk
[cf. YALLER 3] n. 1. light-skinned mulattoes: Yellow folk are people who are more white than colored (Grand Bah.). (Black)
2. white people (humorous). (White)
1454. ...
yellow grits
[ cf. YALLER 2] n. coarsely-ground guinea-corn meal.= GUINEA-CORN GRITS, ISLAND GRITS, NATIVE GRITS, RED GRITS (Nassau) ...
yellow jack
[DJE idem] n. a fish, Caranx bartholomeai: 1905 (Shattuck 302). (Gen.) ...
yellow-mouth grouper
(Black); yellow grouper (Andros, Adelaide) n, a fish, Mycteroperca inter-stitialis: 1968 (Bohlke 284). ...
yellow-mouth grunt
(Gen.); yellow grunt (Andros) n. a fish, Haemulon sp. ...
yellow nicker (tree)
[DJE idem ; from its seeds] n. a tree, Guilandina bonduc or Caesalpina bonduc: 1889 (Gardner 375). = RED NICKER cf. NICKER (BEAN) (Exuma, White) ...
yellow popper
n. a tree, the yellow elder (Tecoma stans): 1889 (Gardner 397). = TRUMPET FLOWER (Exuma, Inagua) ...
yellow sponge
[DAB idem 1877→; cf. YALLER 2] n. a yellow or brownish short-fibered commercial sponge, Spongia officinalis barbara: 1836 A specimen of Yellow Sponge... from the ...
yellow stingray
n. a fish, Urolophus jamaicensis: 1968 (Böhlke 31). (Black) ...
yellow tail
n. a fish, Ocyurus chrysurus: 1918 He went to a drop where he hook a fine yellow-tail (Parsons 126). YELLOW-TAIL SNAPPER 1 (Gen.) ...
yellow tail snapper
n. 1.a fish, Ocyurus chrysurus: 1968 (Böhlke 358). = YELLOW-TAIL (Eleu.) 2. [Car.] another fish, Messoprian chrysurus: The yellow-tail has two lines down the side ...
yellow-tail stripe
n. a style of plaiting broad strips of light and dark STRAW1 together to form a pat-tern of dashes (Bannister display). ...
yellow vine
n. 1. a plant, Urechites lutea, with a twining stem and a yellow flower: 1971 (Rabley 9).
2. a parasitic plant which grows thick in ...
yellow-wing
[cf. WING I fin] n. a fish, a variety of grunt (Haemulon sp.). (Mayag.) ...
yellow-wing jack
(Black); yellow-fin jack (Eleu.) n. a fish, probably Caranx hippos. ...
yerry
[Atlantic (Hancock 1969:38); cf. Brit. dial. North, West year hear (EDD) + -EE, pidgin suf- fix] v., Obs. to hear: 1888 No eberyting you yerry ...
yesterday-day-before
adv, phr. the day before yesterday: 1918 Yesterday day befo' b'o' Long-Tus' (Parsons 143). (Gen.) ...
yet
[cf. OED not yet still not] adv. still: 1918 An' he went, an' he meet no rabbit yet (Parsons 11), 1966 Poor Booky, yet cutting ...
yeye
/yay/ [Atlantic (Hancock 1969:60); cf. OED yie eye abs. →16th century; "by palatalization of initial vowel: cf. Engl., Scots, US dial.. There may be some ...
yiddy
[cf. DJE yiti idem; W3 itty-bitty tiny (prob. from baby talk for little bit)] adj. little: 1918 I only p'int me yiddy*, yiddy finger at ...
yinnaself
[cf. YINNA 1 + -self] refl. pron. yourselves: Go bathe yinnaself off fore y 'all come talking bout l ain' dress good (Nassau). cf. ONASELF, ...
Yiya
[cf. Car. yaya an affectionate term of address to one's mother or grandmother; cf. Kongo yaya, Ewe ya, Yoruba iya, all 'mother' DJE] n. a ...
Ynagua
n. a former spelling of INAGUA: 1788 (Schoepf 314). ...
Yoruba, Youraba
[cf. Yoruba an ethnic group in southeastern Nigeria] n. an African tribal group: 1891 [Bahamians] still retain their African tribal distinctions; they are divided into ...
you, yuh
[also W Car., US Black ADD; cf. OED you your obs. →1642 or dial. (rare); derived by regular loss of postvocalic /r/ and lack of ...
you mussy wanna shit
[cf. you must be smell yourself idem] phr. You are too impudent. (Gen.) ...
you-all
[Car. (Hancock 1978:1); US dial. South idem ADD; cf. Twi mó nyina (lit, you all) idem (Herskovitz 288)] pron. you (plural): 1895 Chil-dren. . 'e'll ...
you-nay
/yúwney/ [probably from a reanalysis of YiNNA, YOUNA you (pl.) as you and they; cf. -NAY in Mary-nay Mary and her family/friends] pron. you (PI.). ...
young blood
n.1. [OED, a young hothead obs. →1630] a hot-blooded young man; a daredevil. cf. BLOOD (Inagua, White)
2. [cf. US Black, a young black person ...
young corn
[W Car.] n. tender, immature ears of maize, eaten whole as a vegetable. (San Sal.) ...
young heads
(W Car.; cf. OLD HEADS] n. the younger generation: Y 'all wouldna know bout that—y'all is a set o' young heads (Nassau). cf. YOUNG BLOOD ...
young machioneel
[from the belief that it is im-mature MANCHINEEL, a different sp. (Patterson p.c.)] n. a shrub, Grimrneodendron eglandulo-sum, with poisonous fruit: 1977 (Patterson 25). = ...
young moon
[OED idem →1849] n. a new or waxing moon: 1977 A new moon, or young moon as we call it (Albury 23). = COMING MOON ...
yourns
/yohnz/ [cf. Brit, dig. Mid, South yourn yours (Orton M78); US dial. yourn, you-own yours, you-uns' your ADD] poss. pron. yours: If I was you ...
yucksing /yóksin/, yooksing /yúksin/
[cf. YUCK (/yuk/ in Brit. dial. North)] n. shooting marbles in a manner not permitted by the rules. (Black) ...
yucksome
[cf. US slang yuck exclamation of dis-gust 1972 →BDNE II, but given its use by older Bah. speakers, the term may be related to YUCK ...
Yumeta
[probably from Lucayan; possibly by confusion with YUMEY] n., Obs. former name of Long Island: 1635 Yumeta (Atlas Novus). 1782 Yumeta (or Long Island) (Bruce ...
Yumey
[from Lucayan; Y in 16th century Sp. may have represented a sound more like /zh/, and x was formerly used for /sh/; cf. spellings Xuma, ...