1. kay - Noun
2. kay - Interjection
3. Kay - Proper noun
kay
(colloquial) Abbreviation of okay.
The name of the Latin-script letter K.
(colloquial) A kilometer.
(colloquial) A thousand of some unit (from kilo-).
Dated form of cay.
A surname from Middle English derived from several Old and Middle English words; also adopted by immigrants whose surnames began with a K.
A male given name from Welsh derived from the surnames, or from a rare medieval given name (as the Sir Kay of Arthurian legend), Welsh Cai, Latinized as Caius, related to the modern male name Kai.
A short form of Katherine and other female names beginning with a "K"; popular as a middle name.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgI wanted to play the part that Mary Kay played, the lawyer who wanted to have baby and felt her clock ticking, because it was something I could relate to. JoBeth Williams
It was June, 1933, one week after Commencement, when Kay Leiland Strong, Vassar '33, the first of her class to run around the table at the Class Day dinner, was married to Harald Petersen, Reed '27, in the chapel of St. George's Church, P. E., Karl F. Reiland, Rector. Mary McCarthy
Can you, in a million years, imagine another female senator - Kay Bailey Hutchinson, Claire McCaskill - reacting to being called 'ma'am' like Barbara Boxer did? This is the kind of sanctimonious self-absorption on the modern left that makes my teeth itch. Mark Davis
Four years earlier I had been selected, with Kay Boyle, the writer, and a number of others, to go to Cambodia and come back and prove that there were no sanctuaries in that country. William Kunstler
Why paired?” Viktor asked. "Have two sexes?” "Hard to imagine how electromagnetic creatures could,” Mary Kay said. Viktor grinned. "Lack of imagination is not an argument. Especially lately. Gregory Benford
“2020 is primarily going to be a development and design phase, so you won’t necessarily see any construction or improvements in the ground this year,” said NODO MAP manager Kay Yesuwan. Source: Internet