wakey

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See also: Wakey

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

wake +‎ -y

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈweɪki/
  • (file)

Noun[edit]

wakey (plural not attested)

  1. (military, slang) The day on which one wakes up and travels home.
    • 2003, Gary Blinco, Down a Country Lane:
      'You beauty, only 364 and a wakey to go,' the countdown had begun and would continue, as few days passed without someone calling the time. I spared a thought for our temporary enemy whose tour would endure to the end of the war []
    • 2010, Ian McGibbon, New Zealand's Vietnam War, page 542:
      Morale was also usually high, helped by the men's recognition that their service in Vietnam had strict limits – one year, or, to use a soldiers' expression of the time, 364 days and a 'wakey' (the day the men woke to prepare to fly out).
    • 2011, Richard "Barney" Bigwood, We Were Reos: Australian Infantry Reinforcements in VIETNAM (page 47)
      When you became a 'short timer' (20 days and a wakey) you delighted in sticking it up to the new arrivals.

Interjection[edit]

wakey

  1. Used to encourage someone to wake up.; wakey wakey.
    • 2016, W S Markendale, Owen Pendragon: Guild of the Round Table:
      Wakey Brother Monster,” he said to Rose as he spread his replacement piece of toast.
    • 2021, Margaret Thornton, Cast the First Stone:
      'Come on now, wakey!' called Diane, who was already up and dashing round the room.

See also[edit]

Anagrams[edit]

Meriam[edit]

Noun[edit]

wakey

  1. thigh