• Fay

    Pronunciation

    • enPR: fā, IPA: /feɪ/
    • Homophones: fey
    • Rhymes: -eɪ

    Origin 1

    From Middle English feyen, feien, from Old English fēġan ("to join, unite"), from Proto-Germanic *fōgijaną ("to join"), from Proto-Germanic *fōgō ("joint, slot"), from Proto-Indo-European *paḱ- ("to fasten, place"). Akin to Old Frisian fōgia ("to join"), Old Saxon fōgian ("to join"), Middle Low German fögen ("to join, add"), Dutch voegen ("to add, place"), Old High German fuogen ("to connect") (German fügen ("to connect")), Old English fōn ("to catch"). More at fang.

    Full definition of fay

    Verb

    1. To fit.
    2. To join or unite closely or tightly.
      • US Patent Application 20070033853, 2006:Under the four outer corners of the horizontal frame platform 22 are four tubular leg sleeves 23 that are fay together one at each outer corner.
      • Model Shipbuilders, 2010:I have a strip cutter and I can cut the exact widths I need to fit, they are easy to fay together and attach very firmly to the bulkheads.
    3. To lie close together.
    4. To fadge.

    Derived terms

    Origin 2

    From Middle English fegien, fæien ("to cleanse"), from Old Norse fægja ("to cleanse, polish"), from Proto-Germanic *fēgijaną ("to decorate, make beautiful"), from Proto-Indo-European *pōḱ-, *pēḱ- ("to clean, adorn"). Cognate with Swedish feja ("to sweep"), Danish feje ("to sweep"), German fegen ("to cleanse, scour, sweep"), Dutch vegen ("to sweep, strike"). More at feague, fake, fair.

    Verb

    1. (dialectal) To cleanse; clean out.

    Origin 3

    Middle English faie, fei ("a place or person possessed with magical properties"), from Middle French feie, fee ("fairy", "fae"). More at fairy.

    Noun

    fay

    (plural fays)
    1. A fairy; an elf.
      • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, II.ii:that mighty Princesse did complaine
        Of grieuous mischiefes, which a wicked Fay
        Had wrought ....

    Origin 4

    Abbreviation of ofay.

    Noun

    fay

    (plural fays)
    1. (US slang) A white person.

    Adjective

    fay

    1. (US slang) White.
      • 1946, Mezz Mezzrow and Bernard Wolfe, Really the Blues, Payback Press 1999, p. 62:I really went for Ray's press roll on the drums; he was the first fay boy I ever heard who mastered this vital foundation of jazz music.

    Anagrams

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