fugazi

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Pronunciation === (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /fuˈɡɑːzi/, /fuˈɡeɪzi/ (General American) IPA(key): /fuˈɡɑzi/, /fuˈɡeɪzi/ Rhymes: -ɑːzi, -eɪzi Hyphenation: fu‧ga‧zi === Etymology 1 === Origin unknown; a number of possibilities have been suggested: One theory is that it is a corruption of French fougasse (“type of land mine”); flame fougasses were used extensively in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Less plausibly, it might be from English fugacious (“fleeting”) or cognates such as Italian fugace (“fleeting”). It has also been suggested that it could be an acronym of “fucked up, got ambushed, zipped in [a body bag]”, but this is more likely a backronym, not the origin (compare FUBAR). ==== Adjective ==== fugazi (US, chiefly military, especially during the Vietnam War era, slang) Fucked up; broken, damaged beyond repair. Synonyms: FUBAR; see also Thesaurus:broken ==== See also ==== clusterfuck SNAFU === Etymology 2 === Uncertain; said to be of Mafia origin, from the Fugazy Continental limousine company in New York City which was owned by William “Bill” Fugazy, due to its cheesy “look like a rich guy” advertisements of the 1970s and 1980s, or its alleged poor business practices, possibly influenced by Sicilian fu cazzu (“it was nothing”). The word was popularized by the film Donnie Brasco (1997), based on the book Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia (1987) by American former FBI agent Joseph D. Pistone (born 1939) who used the name “Donnie Brasco” as an undercover alias. First use in English appears c. 1974 in the novel Bones of Contention by Nicholas Gage. ==== Adjective ==== fugazi (US, slang) Fake. ===== Alternative forms ===== fugazy ==== Noun ==== fugazi (plural fugazis) (US, slang) A thing or (less commonly) a person that is fake; a fake, a fraud. ===== Alternative forms ===== fugazy === References === === Further reading === fugazi (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia