Savvy Definition
(informal) To understand.
(informal) Do you understand?
Other Word Forms of Savvy
Adjective
Origin of Savvy
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1785, as a noun, "practical sense, intelligence;" also a verb, "to know, to understand;" West Indies pidgin borrowing of French savez(-vous) (“do you know")" or Spanish sabe (usted) (“you know"), both from Vulgar Latin *sapere, from Latin sapere (“be wise, be knowing") (see sapient). The adjective is first recorded 1905, from the noun.
From Wiktionary
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From Spanish sabe (usted) (you) know from saber to know from Old Spanish from Vulgar Latin sapēre from Latin sapere to be wise sep- in Indo-European roots
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
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Alteration of save, sabi (“know") (in English-based creoles and pidgins), from Portuguese or Spanish sabe (“[he] knows"), from saber (“to know"), from Latin sapere (“to be wise").
From Wiktionary
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