way

  • 61way — Questioning the truth of something. Also confirming the truth of something. Can be substituted for really. I got with Veronica Vaughn last night. No way! Way …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 62way — I. , sb. == road. RG. 7, 391; ‘to fly his way.’ O. and N. 308. ‘Do way,’ an expression like our ‘Get along with you.’ Alys. 7646; pl. ‘weyre.’ Body and Soul, 63 II. , sb. == mass? Ritson’s AS. viii. 31. AS. wæcg …

    Oldest English Words

  • 63way — See oil way one way clutch …

    Dictionary of automotive terms

  • 64way in — noun an entrance See Also: way out …

    Wiktionary

  • 65Way — noun the Were walking along the Way now …

    Wiktionary

  • 66way — See way, ways, weigh …

    Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • 67Way — Recorded in many forms including Way, Waye, Wey, Weigh, Attaway, Bitheway, Byway (English) Weg, Wegman and Wegmann (German), Van der Weghe, Van der Wegen and Wegman (Dutch) Wegsman (Askenasic) and possibly others including the English Wayman,… …

    Surnames reference

  • 68way to go — Canadian Slang [wai too goe] Said at hockey and baseball games You scored? Way to go!! …

    English dialects glossary

  • 69way — [OE] In common with German and Dutch weg, Swedish väg, and Danish vej, way goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *wegaz. This was formed from the base *weg ‘move, carry’ (source also of English waggon, wee, and weigh), which in turn was descended… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 70Way to go! — int Good going, nice job. Nice 3 pointer, Bev. Way to go! 1950s …

    Historical dictionary of American slang