The Yiddish word for old woman is "bubbie."
"Alter mensch."
Grandfather in Yiddish is "זיידע" (zeide).
In Yiddish, grandfather is "zaide" (זיידע).
The Yiddish word for grandmother is "Bubbe" or "Bubby."
"meh-SHOO-geh", which is the Hebrew word "meh-shoo-GAH".
I believe it is Yiddish for crazy.
You can say "kleyn man" in Yiddish to refer to a little man.
I went on to a yiddish translator and got `man as an answer.Hope this helps.מאן - Mahn
In Yiddish, husband is "man."
Meshuggah is Yiddish for crazy. Spelling varies.
"Mashugana" is a Yiddish term that means "crazy" or "foolish." It is often used informally to describe someone who is behaving eccentrically or irrationally.
In Yiddish, "crazy people" can be expressed as "meshuggenahs" (משוגענעס). The term "meshuggeneh" (משוגענע) refers to a single crazy person, while "meshuggenahs" is the plural form. These words convey a light-hearted or colloquial sense of craziness.
mushuganah (as in a crazzy person :P) ~chachi
fakokta means messed up or crazy in yiddish
Meshugganer (meshugganah) is a Yiddish word meaning crazy.
Methinks it's Yiddish for "Crazy" Example: "You Meshugena schmuck!!"