Oy vey

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Look up oy vey in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

"Oy vey" (Yiddish: אױ װײ) (often just "oy"[1]) is an exclamation of dismay or exasperation (Webster's New Millennium Dictionary of English)[1] meaning "Oh, woe" or "Oh, no". The term was borrowed from Yiddish[2], and is often described as "defying translation"[3] or being an "untranslatable expression"[4] but which is translated by Random House Unabridged Dictionary as being "used to express dismay, pain, annoyance, grief, etc."[1] and the Oxford English dictionary describes it as an "exclamation used by Yiddish-speakers to express dismay or grief"[3]. In 2001, United States state Assembly Speaker, Robert Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys), compiled a 31 page Yiddish dictionary for his colleagues and of the word "oy vey" he defined it as "an untranslatable expression used for a variety of negative feelings.[4]" This interjection is first noted in English between 189095[1]

A related exclamation is "oy vey iz mir" - "Oh, woe is me" (Yiddish: אױ װײ'ז מיר) or just "vey iz mir" (װײ'ז מיר) — "woe is me", or. It is related to the expression "Oy gevalt" (Yiddsh: אױ גװאַלד oy gvald), which can have similar meaning, or also express shock or amazement. "Oy!" is often just used by itself to express any of these feelings.

A sign leaving Brooklyn saying "Leaving Brooklyn: Oy Vey!" (2006).
A sign leaving Brooklyn saying "Leaving Brooklyn: Oy Vey!" (2006).

  1. ^ a b c d Oy Definition - Random House Unabridged Dictionary and Webster's New Millennium Dictionary of English
  2. ^ CNN - CNN - January 19, 2004
  3. ^ a b The Guardian - The Guardian - January 20, 2004
  4. ^ a b Los Angeles Business Journal - June 18, 2001
  5. ^ New York Times - NYT - "JIM RUTENBERG", February 25, 2006, "In September, a new sign went up on the Williamsburg Bridge, and it won national notice as another example of New York City's singularly abrasive charm: Leaving Brooklyn, Oy Vey! The sign, the brainchild of the Brooklyn borough president, Marty Markowitz, gained attention in newspapers as far away as Pittsburgh and Kansas City."
  6. ^ Boston Globe - Boston Globe April 10, 1992
  7. ^ Amazon - Tin Machine Live: Oy Vey, Baby by David Bowie
  8. ^ The Simpsons, "Like Father, Like Clown" Transcript
  9. ^ CNN - CNN - "Weird Al: Living up to his name": July 12, 1999
  10. ^ NYT New York Times Book Review - September 3, 1965 - "by So/ Weinstein, called 'Loxfinger,' which introduces Israel Bond, the Hebrew Secret Agent whose number is 'Oy Oy seven.'"
  11. ^ Independent (Newspaper) - October 17, 1968, Long Beach, California - "....Wherein Israel Bond, Agent Oy Oy Seven, pulls off his final caper for the Israel M33 and 1-3 Bureau..."
  12. ^ ROSTEN OBIT National Public Radio - NPR - February 20, 1997 (subscription required)
  13. ^ Pittsburgh Post Gazette - Pittsburgh Post Gazette/The Wall Street Journal - by Michael M. Phillips - May 6, 2005
  14. ^ Office Quotes

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