yes
Americanadverb
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(used to express affirmation or assent or to mark the addition of something emphasizing and amplifying a previous statement).
Do you want that? Yes, I do.
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(used to express an emphatic contradiction of a previously negative statement or command).
Don't do that! Oh, yes I will!
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(used, usually interrogatively, to express hesitation, uncertainty, curiosity, etc.).
“Yes?” he said as he opened the door. That was a marvelous show! Yes?
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(used to express polite or minimal interest or attention.)
noun
verb (used with object)
interjection
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used to express acknowledgment, affirmation, consent, agreement, or approval or to answer when one is addressed
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used, often with interrogative intonation, to signal someone to speak or keep speaking, enter a room, or do something
noun
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an answer or vote of yes
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(often plural) a person who votes in the affirmative
Usage
Plural word for yes The plural form of yes is either yeses or yesses, but yeses is more widely used. The plurals of several other singular words that end in -s are also formed the same way, such as bus/buses/busses, gas/gases/gasses, and lotus/lotuses/lotusses. In some instances, particularly informally, the plural form of yes is written with an apostrophe, as in yes's. This is not considered standard, but it may be easier to understand in some contexts because many people are unfamiliar with the plural form of yes. The word yes is only pluralized when it is used as a noun rather than in its more common use as an adverb. The word yes as a noun means "an answer or vote of yes" or "a person who votes in the affirmative," as in The noes outnumbered the yeses.
Other Word Forms
Noun Inflected Forms
Etymology
Origin of yes
First recorded before 900; Middle English yes, yis, Old English gēse (adverb and noun), probably equivalent to gēa yea + sī “be it” (present subjunctive singular of bēon “to be”; see be)
Explanation
Yes is a confirmation or an affirmative — a positive reply. When you say yes to a friend's invitation to a party, it means you'll be there. There's no more positive word in the English language: You use yes to agree, to confirm, or to answer positively. It works best of all to express uninhibited enthusiasm like when you get great news and yell it, maybe even closing your eyes in joy while you say it. Yes comes from the Old English gise, or so be it.
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
See Examples For:
His 5-year-old, asked if he would be a better player than his dad, said yes.
From Los Angeles Times ● Jul. 15, 2026
Verdugo’s yes vote made it unanimous—given he was the only council member present.
From The Wall Street Journal ● Jul. 15, 2026
The bottom line is that yes, people are earning more and home prices are growing more slowly.
From MarketWatch ● Jul. 14, 2026
Collins voted against that bill but did vote yes on a key procedural measure that allowed it to come to the Senate floor.
From Salon ● Jul. 14, 2026
Ba would be leaving for his buying trip that morning, so it was easy to say yes.
From "The Red Car to Hollywood" by Jennie Liu
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But the reality is that celebrating these special days is expensive — and seven yeses add up pretty quickly.
From MarketWatch ● Jul. 7, 2026
The choir got a standing ovation and four yeses from the judges after performing Never Enough from The Greatest Showman.
From BBC ● Apr. 12, 2026
Kentridge brings it to America thirsting for even less good yeses and noes.
From Los Angeles Times ● Feb. 8, 2025
As an image of the final object — Verner Panton’s 1990s Vilbert chair — was added atop the pile of yeses, Antonelli appraised the victors and nodded.
From New York Times ● Mar. 28, 2024
Spectators in the crowd murmured yeses in response.
From "Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice" by Phillip Hoose
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To his family, Disney was a genius to be pampered; to his business associates, he was the boss to be yessed.
From Time Magazine Archive
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As this remark, adequately yessed, had been on the tip of Mr. Gilbert's tongue, he could not be blamed for rather abruptly changing the subject.
From The Beautiful and Damned by Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis Scott)
But this was no New Deal yessing, for banishing of tax exemption would mean a better market for ordinary corporate bond issues I. B. A. members underwrite.
From Time Magazine Archive
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No yessing Hearstling, he some-times lectures Mr. Hearst as if he were a small boy.
From Time Magazine Archive
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His character flaws were widely discussed: his stubbornness, his vanity, his occasional vindictiveness, his habit of yessing callers just to be amiable.
From Time Magazine Archive
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My grandfather had been wrong about yessing them to death and destruction or else things had changed too much since his day.
From "Invisible Man" by Ralph Ellison
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I started yessing them the next day and it began beautifully.
From "Invisible Man" by Ralph Ellison
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.