From the French "M'aidez" meaning "help me".
So any French or English speaker can use the same call when he's in trouble,
and anybody who hears him and understands French or English understands
that he has a real problem. That includes a sizable fraction of the world's total
population.
I have read that "mayday" the distress signal is taken from "m'aidez," French for "help me."
Ethan
Indonesia
Dakar, Senegal
a hole in your mom.
germane
The term "mayday" comes from the French phrase "m'aider," meaning "help me." It was adopted as an international distress signal in the 1920s by the International Radiotelegraphic Convention. The use of "mayday" is particularly associated with maritime and aviation emergencies, where it is repeated three times ("mayday, mayday, mayday") to indicate a serious situation requiring immediate assistance.
They came from in Tallhasse, Florida.
Mayday derives from the French venez m'aider, meaning 'come help me'. It is used to signal a life-threatening emergency.
they are frome the urasian steps north of china
It comes frome butts
the Aztecs came from north Korea