wayne

German

Etymology

From English Wayne, which sounds somewhat similar to German wen (“whom”, pronounced [veːn] or [ʋeːn]). The sense is derived from trick questions of the sort: „Kennst du Wayne?“ – ? – „Wayne interessiert’s.“, that is: wen interessiert's. (“Do you know Wayne?” – ? – “Wayne cares.” [= “Who cares.”]).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /wɛɪ̯n/, /weːn/

Interjection

wayne

  1. (youth slang) who cares
    Synonyms: mir doch egal, wen interessiert's
    Helmut Schmidt ist tot. — Ach, wayne.
    Helmut Schmidt is dead. — Ah, who cares.

Middle English

Noun

wayne

  1. Alternative form of wayn (wagon)

Noun

wayne

  1. Alternative form of wayn (gain)

Verb

wayne

  1. Alternative form of waynen (move by wagon)

Verb

wayne

  1. Alternative form of waynen (depart)
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