The formal vocabulary of Shelby County Commission meetings is slowly gravitating from the antique and ornamental to current and ordinary forms of speech.
Until recently, as an example, meetings used to be opened by invocations by the sergeant-at-arms of the venerable Anglo-Norman phrase โoyez, oyez,โ (except that the uniformed county officer serving in that role would pronounce the phrase โOh yes, oh yes.โ) These days, the officer says instead, โHear ye, hear ye,โ which happens to be what the archaic phrase โoyez, oyez,โ still used in the U.S. Supreme Court and by numerous other tribunals, actually means.
A parallel phenomenon has been the attrition undergone by the archaic term โayeโ as the traditional signifier of an affirmative vote. At some point in the early days of the Commission that was elected and installed in 2018, new Commissioner David Bradford, who represents Collierville and other suburban areas in east Shelby County, began saying simply โyesโ when, in a roll call of Commissionersโ vote, he gave his okay to this or that measure.
The other members voting on his side of the issue would continue saying โaye,โ an Anglo-Scottich term dating from the 16th century which has got itself lodged in parliamentary idiom ever since. Slowly, though, Bradfordโs usage began catching on with other commissioners โ fellow Republicans Mark Billingsley and Mick Wright, especially โ who are now apt to say โyesโ as often as โayeโ when they vote in favor.
Though the dominion of the traditional term is slipping on the Commission, the ayes still have it, for the most part, as the word continues its general prevalence in roll calls. Oddly, the symmetrical equivalent to it, โnay,โ goes totally unspoken in normal circumstances, except in the occasional summing up of a negative vote outcome, as in โthe nays have it.โ

