We can't answer your question because you didn't include the excerpt. Only you have it. I suggest you read it carefully. Under line the main idea and circle the details and you will have your answers.
No hay de qué means "You're welcome." It's like saying, "Oh, it's nothing."
It means you touch yourself at night!
Hay day is an old saying that means an easy day, plenty of play. It was said that a horse would rather eat hay than graze all day for the same amount of feed.
"Make hay while the sun shines." Historically mowing (making hay) is best done when the hay is ripe and dry. Damp hay spoils and rots and is no good for the animals. So, mowing is done on a sunny day, before rain comes and spoils the hay. This saying means to us, less rural folk, "Do it now while you have the chance."
Little Boy Blue was fast asleep under the hay stack, as described in the nursery rhyme.
That it is not the way you should go, it is just hatred and violence that you are entering, and it is not going to help our community
The abbreviation for excerpt is "ex."
K la K hay is another form of saying, 1)What's up? 2)What's going on? Mostly used by Puerto Ricans.
Two meanings for "dicho": (1) "have said" (I have said = he dicho) (2) "a saying" or "an adage" (there is a saying or there is an adage = hay un dicho).
Excerpt is a noun.
The prefix to "excerpt" is "ex-".