fuck
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Alternative forms ===
f##k, f#$k, f#%k, f#*k, f#@k, f***, f**k, f*ck, f--k, f@%k, fck, fk, fsck, fu#k, fu$k, fu*k, fu-k, fu...k, fu@k, fu©k, fvck, f—k, f&!k, f...k, f…k, fu…k, 4uck, fuxk (censored)
F-bomb, F-word (euphemistic)
fuk, fuq, phuck (deliberate misspellings)
uckfay (Pig Latin)
=== Etymology ===
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 CE charter that mentions a place called Fuccerham, which may mean "hām (“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; compare 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 8 December 1310. It was first listed in a dictionary in 1598. Scots fuk or 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. See windfucker and fuckwind for more information.
A range of folk-etymological backronyms, such as fornication under consent of the king and for unlawful carnal knowledge, are all demonstrably false.
Verb sense 7 from related sense feck.
=== Pronunciation ===
(Received Pronunciation, US) enPR: fŭk, IPA(key): /fʌk/, [fʌk̚]
(Northern England) IPA(key): /fʊk/
(General Australian) IPA(key): /fɐk/, [fäk]
Rhymes: -ʌk, -ʊk
=== Verb ===
fuck (third-person singular simple present fucks, present participle fucking, simple past and past participle fucked)(vulgar)
(intransitive, literally) To have sexual intercourse; to copulate.
Synonyms: bang, do it, eff, have sex, hump, screw, shag; see also Thesaurus:copulate
(transitive) To have sexual intercourse with.
Synonyms: bang, eff, give someone one, hump, ream, screw, shag; see also Thesaurus:copulate with
(intransitive or transitive) To have penetrative sex (as opposed to oral sex, etc.).
(transitive) To insert one's penis, a dildo, etc., into a person or a specified orifice or cleft sexually; to penetrate.
(transitive, reflexive) To masturbate.
(transitive) To put in an extremely difficult or impossible situation.
(transitive) To defraud, deface, or otherwise treat badly.
Synonyms: fuck over, screw, screw over
(transitive, usually derogatory) Used to express great displeasure with, or contemptuous dismissal of, someone or something.
Synonyms: bugger, eff, to hell with, screw
(transitive, usually followed by up) To break, to destroy.
Synonyms: annihilate, obliterate, ruin; see also Thesaurus:destroy
Used in a phrasal verb: fuck with (“to play with, to tinker”).
Synonyms: mess, toy
(transitive, Ireland, UK) To throw, to lob something. (angrily)
Synonym: feck
(transitive, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, India, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, military slang) To scold.
(intransitive, slang) To be very good, to rule, go hard.
==== Conjugation ====
==== Translations ====
=== Noun ===
fuck (countable and uncountable, plural fucks) (vulgar, colloquial)
(countable, literally) An act of sexual intercourse.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:copulation
(countable, literally) A sexual partner, especially a casual one.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:sexual partner
(countable) A highly contemptible person.
Synonyms: dickhead; see also Thesaurus:jerk
(countable, chiefly in the negative) The smallest amount of concern or consideration.
Synonyms: shit, damn
(uncountable) Semen.
1866, The Romance of Lust, quoted in 2023, 12 Masterpieces of Erotic literature […] (Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing):
Of course the cunt full of fuck only excited him the more, and he very soon racked off to her great satisfaction, and was dismissed, leaving the rooms vacant for the two at eleven. As there was not five minutes to spare she ran to No. 3, […]
(Can we date this quote?) Marquis de Sade, 120 Days of Sodom (2013 edition by Simon and Schuster: →ISBN):
She would raise her skirts, display her ass, and the libertine, all smiles, would spray his fuck upon it. A fourth required the same preliminaries, but as soon as the strokes of the cane began to rain down upon his back, he would frig himself […]
1993, "Farmer's Step-daughter" in alt.sex.stories (Usenet):
She had thought often about what it would be like to let [him] shoot a full load of his fuck into her face. […] She felt the warm fuck filling her mouth, coating her tongue and draining back toward her throat.
==== Derived terms ====
bull-fuck (“gravy (likened to semen)”)
fuckwit
==== Translations ====
=== Interjection ===
fuck (vulgar)
A semi-voluntary vocalization in place of a gasp.
(colloquial) Expressing dismay or discontent. [1885?]
Synonyms: fark, feck, fook, frick, fsck; see also Thesaurus:dammit
(colloquial) Expressing surprise or enjoyment.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:wow
==== Synonyms ====
motherfucker
fuark
==== Descendants ====
Tok Pisin: fak
→⇒ Afrikaans: fok
→ Chinese: 法克 (fǎkè)
→ French: fuck, fucker
→ Hebrew: דָּפַק, פָאק
→ Icelandic: fokk
→ Irish: foc
→ Japanese: ファック (fakku)
→ Norwegian Bokmål: fucke, føkke
→ Norwegian Nynorsk: fucka, føkka
→ Pitcairn-Norfolk: fak
→ Russian: фак (fak)
→ Serbo-Croatian: fak, фак
→ Ukrainian: фак (fak)
→ Welsh: ffwcio
==== Translations ====
=== Adverb ===
fuck (not comparable) (vulgar, colloquial)
Used as an intensifier for the words "yes" and "no".
Synonyms: hell, god, shit, heck
(UK, Ireland) Used after an inverted subject pronoun and auxiliary verb or copula to emphatically negate the verb.
Synonyms: heck, buggery
=== Particle ===
fuck
(vulgar, slang, especially African-American Vernacular) Used as a shortened form of various common interrogative phrases.
Synonym: the fuck
==== Derived terms ====
=== References ===
=== Further reading ===
Sheidlower, Jesse, The F Word (1999) →ISBN.
Michael Quinion (2004), “Fuck”, in Ballyhoo, Buckaroo, and Spuds: Ingenious Tales of Words and Their Origins, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books in association with Penguin Books, →ISBN.
“fuck”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
“fuck”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
“fuck”, in Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
“fuck” (US) / “fuck” (UK) in Macmillan English Dictionary.
“fuck”, in Collins English Dictionary, 2011–present.
“fuck”, in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th edition, Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016, →ISBN.
“fuck”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.
=== Anagrams ===
FCUK, fcuk
== Danish ==
=== Etymology ===
Borrowed from English fuck.
=== Particle ===
fuck
(swear word) Expresses dislike of the postpositive complement.
== Dutch ==
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): /fʏk/, /fɑk/
=== Etymology 1 ===
Borrowed from English fuck.
==== Interjection ====
fuck
(vulgar) fuck!
Synonyms: kut, klote, tering, kanker, godver, godverdomme, verdomme
===== Related terms =====
=== Etymology 2 ===
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
==== Verb ====
fuck
inflection of fucken:
first-person singular present indicative
(in case of inversion) second-person singular present indicative
imperative
== Japanese ==
=== Etymology ===
Borrowed from English fuck.
=== Pronunciation ===
(Tokyo) ファック [fáꜜkkù] (Atamadaka – [1])IPA(key): [ɸa̠k̚kɯ̟]
=== Verb ===
fuck(ファック)する • (fakku suru) transitive or intransitive suru (stem fuck(ファック)し (fakku shi), past fuck(ファック)した (fakku shita))
(vulgar) alternative spelling of ファック (fakku)
==== Conjugation ====
== Romanian ==
=== Etymology ===
Unadapted borrowing from English fuck.
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): /fak/
Rhymes: -ak
Hyphenation: fuck
=== Interjection ===
fuck
(youth slang, neologism, vulgar, colloquial) fuck!
== Scots ==
=== Alternative forms ===
fuk
=== Etymology ===
From Middle Scots fuk, from Early Scots *fuken (“to copulate”), from Middle English *fukken, *fuken, probably of North Germanic origin: possibly from Old Norse *fukka, from Proto-Germanic *fukkōną.
=== Verb ===
fuck (third-person singular simple present fucks, present participle fuckin, simple past and past participle fucked)
(vulgar, slang) to fuck