释义 |
f-word noun- the word “fuck” US
The intent is to specify one word, out of thousands that begin with “f”, that the speaker will not use. - Pressed by Mr. Kuntsler, all she would say was: “Every other word was that ‘f’ word.” — J. Anthony Lukas, The Barnyard Epithet and Other Obscenities, p. 29, 1970
- — American Speech, Winter 1988
- The infamous f-word, a designation which came into my consciousness several years ago from my children, now seems to have achieved a kind of respectability among adults discussing questions of obscenity. — Maledicta, p. 9, 1988–1989
- I’d use the F word but Ice Cube got the copyright[.] — MC Serch, Mic Techniques, 1991
- You know. The “F” word. — Carl Hiaasen, Native Tongue, p. 13, 1991
- And he sure liked to say the “F” word a lot. “F...” this, and “F...” that. And everytime he said the “F” word all of them people, for some reason, would cheer. — Forrest Gump, 1992
- Let me help you Bashful, did it involve the F-word? — Pulp Fiction, 1994
- MR. GARRISON: Eric! Did you just say the “F” word? CARTMAN: Fragile? KYLE: No, he’s talking about fuck, dude. You can’t say fuck in front of Mr. Garrison. — South Park, 1999
- [T]hey all used the F-word with the same regularity: as a comma (f’ckin’), for definition (fackin’), or for emphasis (far-kin), and they all looked the same. — Andrew Holmes, Sleb, p. 150, 2002
- The F-word and the MF-word. — The Times Magazine, p. 43, 16 February 2002
- fusion (of musical genres) UK
In music such fusion is viewed with great trepidation, stressed here by its deliberate confusion with “fuck”. - Necmi Calvi does the f-word with Turkish sounds and Western dance beats. — Songlines, p. 52, July/August 2002
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