See also: Juu, juú, and jüü

Finnish

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Etymology

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Variant of joo.

Pronunciation

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Interjection

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juu (colloquial)

  1. yeah, yes

Synonyms

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Further reading

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Anagrams

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Iquito

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Interjection

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juu

  1. hello, hi

References

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Jamaican Creole

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See also: Juu

Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Derived from English due.

Adjective

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juu

  1. due; owing or owed
    • 2019, “Recognize Patois As An Official Language; Says UWI”, in JamaicanInsider.com[2]:
      Juu tu ou Jamiekan a di wan langwij we bring evri Jamiekan tugeda;
      Due to how Jamaican is the language that brings all Jamaicans together;

Etymology 2

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Derived from English dew.

Noun

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juu (plural juu dem, quantified juu)

  1. dew, drizzle
    • 2021, “Wa Wi Kyan Lorn Fram Di Sitn Dem We Wi Si Iina Di Sang We Jeuova Did Tel Muoziz Fi Rait?”, in JW.org[3]:
      Di sitn dem we wi a tiich piipl komiin laik juu pan graas.
      The things we teach people are like [as numerous as] dew drops on the grass.

Further reading

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  • juu at majstro.com

Middle English

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Noun

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juu

  1. Alternative form of Jew

North Frisian

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Pronoun

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juu

  1. (Sylt) Object case of i: you, you all, yourselves

Alternative forms

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Determiner

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juu (invariable)

  1. (Sylt) your, all of your (second-person plural possessive determiner)

Alternative forms

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Pronoun

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juu (plural juuen)

  1. (Sylt) yours, all of yours (second-person plural possessive pronoun)

Alternative forms

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See also

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Swahili

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Etymology

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From Proto-Bantu *ìgʊ̀dʊ̀.

Pronunciation

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  • Audio (Kenya):(file)

Adverb

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juu

  1. up, above (away from earth's centre)
  2. (by extension) about

Antonyms

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Noun

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juu (n class, no plural)

  1. top, upper part

Derived terms

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  • juu ya (concerning, regarding)

Adjective

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-a juu (invariable)

  1. high

Ye'kwana

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Variant orthographies
ALIV juu
Brazilian standard fuu
New Tribes juu

Pronunciation

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Noun

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juu

  1. hair (of the head)
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References

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  • Hall, Katherine Lee (1988) “hu:”, in The morphosyntax of discourse in De'kwana Carib, volumes I and II, Saint Louis, Missouri: PhD Thesis, Washington University
  • Hall, Katherine (2007) “”, in Mary Ritchie Key & Bernard Comrie, editors, The Intercontinental Dictionary Series[4], Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, published 2021