As such, I would say that either spelling would be correct Women entering pubs see friends already ensconced there, stop in their tracks and query : “You all right? But hey, what the heck! As a Southerner, I say we kept it alive so that the folks in the rest of the country could use https://hookupdate.net/escort-index/toledo/ it. Actually they don’t give a damn AnWulf, the “hey’hay in hey/hay is for horses” is a double entendre referring, simultaneously and equally, to the grass and the previously-spoken greeting. “Hay is for horses” means that “there exists this plant called hay, that is intended for horses to eat” and nothing more.