HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of m'kay | Babel Free

Interjection CEFR B1
/mːˈkeɪ/

Definitions

  1. Okay; an expression of acknowledgment or affirmation, now sometimes used in an ironic or condescending sense.
    informal
  2. spelling mkay
    informal
  3. spelling mmkay
    informal
  4. spelling mmmkay
    informal
  5. spelling m’kay
    informal
  6. spelling mm-kay
    informal
  7. spelling mmm-kay
    informal

Examples

“In these tutoring sessions we have found that, when the tutor agrees with the student’s displayed understanding, her signal of confirmation comes quickly after the student’s turn, as in: S. Mkay. hh. And I know it’s negative, just to follow your thought process, because I know that the sine is positive.”
“… the director would go on only when both were satisfied the matcher had understood, as here: D. The long view of the quad uh walkway M. those M. ┌ numbers right? D. └ is number 5 M. Mkay D. Yeah with the numbers on the bottom.”
“1995, Charles Conrad and Lucinda Sinclair-James, “Institutional Pressures, Cultural Constraints, and Communication in Community Mediation Organizations,” in Conflict and Organizations, Anne Maydan Nicotera ed. M1: Mkay. Let me point us back to. This is related to um what we were talking about and how you’re going to um sort of report what happened here tonight.”
“My bold, Crocodile Hunter “Absolutely” withered into “mkay” with the end of the word lilted up like a desperate question.”
“That has nothing to do with star-power crap and everything to do with keeping it real, mkay?”
“C: I want you to re:st (.) re:st (.) as much as you can do (.) is just re:st (.) hhh when >you go< home (.) >you tell< your husband you make dinner honey (.) hhh you take care of me (.) . . . I need >to set< down (.) I need >to rest< (.) P: mmkay (.) C: and >get down< (.) watch your sodium (.) the salt=”
“well i used to have some skilled sticky fingers of my own back in the day so i know a shoplifted dress when i see one mmkay.”
“I looked back to him...mmkay brown hair dark eyes...high cheek bones that lucky monkey I wonder if he has some native American.”
“She was sitting perched on her desk, in that nonchalant, ‘mmkay?’ way teachers do when they’re trying to pretend they’re down with the kids.”
“1999, “It's Easy, MMMKay.” [title, in soundtrack] South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut”
“Let’s get all this straight. He took me to a place he hates to see if I like it. Mmmkay.”
“2004, Stephanie Lehmann, Are You in the Mood http://print.google.com/print?hl=en&id=ECabx9_RoXAC&pg=PA49&lpg=PA49&sig=pW9_uvNdBOBHc__4hwhYzAfhRWs He told her she could sleep in if she liked. “Mmmkay,” she said without opening her eyes, and he kissed her good-bye.”
“I’ll tell you a secret if you promise not to tell anybody, not even the missus, m’kay?”
“But do keep in mind that this film [viz. South Park] is not for the faint of heart, and it ain’t for kids, m’kay?”
“She didn’t ask what that was supposed to mean, but tallied a while on her fingertips and obliged him. “Mm-kay, bye.””
“2005, Bill Eisele, Scrub Match http://print.google.com/print?hl=en&id=7M31jHxhJawC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&sig=no7YkuHLZazkBAuC0ztcd6i9AJI “All I’m saying,” the Asian man said, “is it’s about time she got a whiff of her own breath. Mm-kay?””
““Well, I’m going to take a picture of your arm and then this nice doctor is going to fix it for you, okay?” “Mmm-kay.””

CEFR level

B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.

See also

Learn this word in context

See m'kay used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course