arrey
See also: Arrey
English
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
Interjection
arrey
- (India) Expressing surprise or alarm; hey. [from 19th c.]
- 1893, Rudyard Kipling, “In the Rukh”, in Many Inventions, London: Macmillan and Co., page 206:
- ‘Nay, I cannot move another step,’ he howled. ‘I am old and my turban is lost. Arré! Arré!’
- 2007, Sonja Chandrachud, The Potion of Eternity:
- The dhoti-clad Indian mystic's anger simmered, dangerously close to exploding. 'Arrey! This is just not done in our Indian culture!'
- 2013, Shreya Mathur, But Ira Said:
- 'Arrey baba! How much will you study?' Ma strode into my room with a glass of Bournvita.
- 2023, Radhika Iyengar, Fire on the Ganges, Fourth Estate, page 26:
- The boy screamed, ‘Arre, arre, don't! Don't you dare!’
Anagrams
Manx
Etymology
From Old Irish aire f (“act of guarding; attention”); cognate with Irish and Scottish Gaelic aire (“attention, heed, notice”).
Noun
arrey m (genitive singular arrey, no plural)
- caution, care, attention
- vigilance, invigilation, reserve, surveillance
- guard, watch, guard post, lookout
Antonyms
- neuarrey (“inattention, carelessness”)