My Penis is hungry Posted May 22, 2015 Report Posted May 22, 2015 Chai Yo, that's it, seems so odd at a wedding.
YimSiam Posted May 22, 2015 Author Report Posted May 22, 2015 To paraphrase Mr. Nixon: "Well, when the president does it, that means it is not odd."
buffalo_bill Posted May 22, 2015 Report Posted May 22, 2015 Chai Yo I may step in at this point : " Chaiooooooo " to my best knowledge used by elderly boardmembers at the occasion of an unexpected hard-on . I could imagine a preceding " SuSu !! SuSu !!" by Miss Nok would well fit in here .
jitagawn Posted May 22, 2015 Report Posted May 22, 2015 It means fight on to the finish line... The also use it when they say: soo mai dai Spoken about They(another person) Cannot compete cannot fight if the speaker thinks they themselves are better
limbo Posted May 24, 2015 Report Posted May 24, 2015 I do a lot of running here in Thailand and 'su su' indeed means a form of encouragement, like, fight on or keep going, hang in there! If you want to encourage somebody, you say to him/her 'su su', happened to ma a lot of times during my runs and now I use it myself on a regular base.
radioman Posted May 24, 2015 Report Posted May 24, 2015 My favourite event for hearing this particular chant is the Thai college girl cheerleader competitions. They are quite a visual spectacle and make for a thoroughly enjoyable day out.
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