Let's say you want to say, "Look in the bag." (For those of you who have watched Monsters Inc., Mike said this to Sulley in pig-Latin: "Ook-lay in the Ag-bay.")
Take the first (or first few letters) of the word you want to translate (it depends on the sound it makes: think would become ink-thay), and you put it as the last syllable of the word. After that, put an "ay" after the letter(s). That's pig-Latin.
ississipimay
Megan, in Pig Latin is Eganmay.
ississippiMa pronounced (ISSISSIPPI-MAE)
In Pig Latin, "roncon" would become "onconray." Each word needs to have the consonant(s) at the beginning moved to the end, followed by "ay."
Usually in an elementary school among the students.
Iffanitay
olphin-day
ississipimay
in piglatin it means 'yes' or 'she's'
Megan, in Pig Latin is Eganmay.
ississippiMa pronounced (ISSISSIPPI-MAE)
This can be piglatin for "clear". In piglatin, the word begins with the first vowel, and all the consonants are shifted to the back of the word with the letters "ay" attached to the end. So from clear, "earclay"!
In Pig Latin, "roncon" would become "onconray." Each word needs to have the consonant(s) at the beginning moved to the end, followed by "ay."
"Earday" means "dear" in Piglatin.
Rex its piglatin
Usually in an elementary school among the students.
Piglatin is where you take the first consonant from the word, put it on the end of the word and add -ay. If the word begins in a vowel, you add -way to the end. You'd say "I-way of-lay Aja-way"