Ach ja means 'oh,yes' with a flavour of resignation
Jawohl (pronounced ja vohl) means 'yes!' in German, with emphasis
Ja, der Hammer in German means "Yeah, unbelievable" in English.
"Ja Ja" is an expression in German indecating the of disbelief of a statement. YaYa is a first name, I believe that it originates from Brazil.
Ja means "yes" in German though in Japanese the word refers to God, but there is no such word in English.
I love silent night in german uh huh
For example, when a mother wants her son to clean up his room but he is not willing to do so, the son might answer 'Ja ja' to satisfy his mother. It would then mean 'Bite me' or simply 'No'.
If you mean the spanish spelleing of haha (indicating laughter), in Hebrew you would write חחח if you mean the German expression meaning yes yes, in Hebrew that would be ken ken (כן כן) otherwise, Ja ja is not a real word.
Both "Oui" & "Ja" mean 'Yes,' in French & German.
Ack Ack is anti-aircraft artillery. A battery is usually four to six weapons. The term was used mostly by the British.
Ja ja literally translates as yes yesIt is used to emphasise the fact that the person has already agreed to do something and indicates annoyance that they have been asked again.A similar expression is ja doch!
"Ja" is the word you are looking for.
This is slang for flak, sometimes called AA fire, othertimes known as tirple A (or AAA anti-aircraft-artillery). AA stands for Anti-Air fire. The German name for AA is Fliegerabwehr. The name flak came from the German name Flugabwehrkanone. Which loosely translates as air defense cannon. Others say the name came from the sound of flak making an ack ack sound. 'Ack, ack' does not come from German, but from the alphabet used by British signallers in the First World War. The alphabet involved saying 'ack' for 'a', 'beer' for 'b' and so on...hence AA when transmitted by signallers would be transmitted as 'Ack, ack'. Both. German 88 also called in basic German Acht-acht, eight-eight and also the British use ack-ack. Although the latter is more likely what is being referred during WWI and WWII, seeing that both refer to AA, with the former being more specific, I'd say, this information just gives more insight of use.