fuck
Signification (Anglais)
-
- (colloquial) To have sexual intercourse; to copulate.
- (colloquial) To have sexual intercourse with.
- (colloquial) To insert one's penis, a dildo, or other object, into a person or a specified orifice or cleft sexually; to penetrate.
- (colloquial) To put in an extremely difficult or impossible situation.
- (colloquial) To defraud, deface, or otherwise treat badly.
- (colloquial) Used to express great displeasure with, or contemptuous dismissal of, someone or something.
- (colloquial) To break, to destroy.
- (colloquial) Used in a phrasal verb: fuck with (“to play with, to tinker”).
- (colloquial) To throw, to lob something. (angrily)
- (slang) To scold.
- (colloquial) To be very good, to rule, go hard.
Concepts
connasse
faire l’amour
coucher avec
avoir des relations sexuelles
coucher (avec)
coucher avec qqn
Synonymes
have intercourse
copulate with
have sex with
couple with
have it away
have a go at it
be intimate
spunk
water of life
dash it
goose grease
spuff
melted butter
unite sexually
intercourse with
have a screw
hot fish yoghurt
whore's milk
nut custard
Zinzanbrook
joombye
tatty water
French-fried ice-cream
tail-juice
Aphrodite's Evostick
population paste
father-stuff
Valentines Day porridge
pugwash
love butter
banana yoghurt
Cupid's toothpaste
liquid hairdressing
manfat
man cake batter
Gloy
man-fat
tadpole yoghurt
prick-juice
spunck
doll spit
love nectar
man oil
white blow
gonad glue
man mayonnaise
cock porridge
herbalz
baby juice
hocky
white wee-wee
jessom
spla water
manmuck
hot juice
gentleman's relish
hot milk
jizzle
little tadpoles
coition
Fréquence
Prononcé comme (IPA)
/fʌk/
Étymologie (Anglais)
From Middle English *fukken, probably of Germanic origin: either from Old English *fuccian or Old Norse *fukka, both from Proto-Germanic *fukkōną, from Proto-Indo-European *pewǵ- (“to strike, punch, stab”). Compare windfucker and its debated etymology. Possibly attested in a 772 AD charter that mentions a place called Fuccerham, which may mean "ham (“home”) of the fucker" or "hamm (“pasture”) of the fucker"; a John le Fucker in a record from 1278 may just be a variant of Fulcher, like Fucher, Foker, etc. The earliest unambiguous use of the word in a clearly sexual context, in any stage of English, appears to be in court documents from Cheshire, England, which mention a man called "Roger Fuckebythenavele" (possibly tongue-in-cheek, or directly suggestive of a depraved sexual act) on December 8, 1310. It was first listed in a dictionary in 1598. Scots fuk/fuck is attested slightly earlier, probably reinforcing the Northern Germanic/Scandinavian origin theory. From 1500 onward, the word has been in continual use, superseding jape and sard and largely displacing swive. A range of folk-etymological backronyms, such as "fornication under consent of the king" and "for unlawful carnal knowledge", are all demonstrably false. Sense 10, from related sense feck. See windfucker (regional synonym: fuckwind) for more.
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