fash
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Etymology 1 ===
From early modern French fascher (now fâcher), from Latin fastus (“disdain”).
==== Pronunciation ====
IPA(key): /fæʃ/
Rhymes: -æʃ
==== Verb ====
fash (third-person singular simple present fashes, present participle fashing or fashin, simple past and past participle fashed)
(transitive, Scotland, Geordie, Northern England) To worry; to bother, annoy.
(intransitive, Scotland, Geordie, Northern England) To trouble oneself; to take pains.
(Nigeria, slang) To ignore or forget about someone or something.
===== Derived terms =====
===== Translations =====
==== Noun ====
fash (plural fashes)
(Scotland, Geordie, Northern England) A worry; trouble; bother.
===== Derived terms =====
fashous
==== See also ====
fettle
==== References ====
Whites Latin-English Dictionary: 1899.
Concise Oxford: 1984.
Todd's Geordie Words and Phrases, George Todd, Newcastle, 1977[2]
Frank Graham, editor (1987), “FASH”, in The New Geordie Dictionary, Rothbury, Northumberland: Butler Publishing, →ISBN.
“Fash”, in Palgrave’s Word List: Durham & Tyneside Dialect Group[3], archived from the original on 5 September 2024, from F[rancis] M[ilnes] T[emple] Palgrave, A List of Words and Phrases in Everyday Use by the Natives of Hetton-le-Hole in the County of Durham […] (Publications of the English Dialect Society; 74), London: Published for the English Dialect Society by Henry Frowde, Oxford University Press, 1896, →OCLC.
=== Etymology 2 ===
Clipping of fascist.
==== Noun ====
fash (plural fash)
(slang, derogatory, especially UK) A fascist, a member of the far-right.
(slang, derogatory, in the plural, especially UK) The far-right, especially violent far-right demonstrators, collectively.
===== Derived terms =====
fashy
go fash, lose cash
redfash
===== Translations =====
==== Verb ====
fash
(slang) To make something fascist.
=== Etymology 3 ===
Clipping of fashionable.
==== Adjective ====
fash
(slang) Fashionable.
=== Anagrams ===
Fahs, HFAs, fahs
== Scots ==
=== Etymology ===
From early modern French fascher (now fâcher), from Latin fastus (“disdain”).
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): /faʃ/
=== Verb ===
fash (third-person singular simple present fashes, present participle fashin, simple past and past participle fasht)
(transitive) To bother, worry, annoy.
== Yola ==
=== Etymology ===
From Middle English fass (“leek root”), from Old English fæs.
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): /faʃ/
=== Noun ===
fash
(figurative) confusion, shame
=== References ===