the fuck
English
Etymology
Perhaps modelled after the hell, short for in the hell as in "What in the hell, ...".
Phrase
- (vulgar, slang) Used after interrogative pronouns as an intensifier to express anger, frustration, incredulity, or other strong emotion.
- 2011 April 29, Tim Jonze, The Guardian:
- "Look at this!" she says, mock-appalled at the scene. "Seriously, what the fuck is this about?"
- 2011 April 29, Tim Jonze, The Guardian:
- (vulgar, slang) Used after verbs forming a part of a phrasal verb as an intensifier to imply aggressive emphasis.
- 2004, Pun Plamondon, Lost from the Ottawa, page 84:
- “Get the fuck out of my house!” Sinclair bellowed, his face red, eyes bulging.
- 2007, Ron Liebman, Death by Rodrigo, New York: Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, page 134:
- Ponytail tells fat boy, Drive the fuck off, get us out of here. He keeps the window down, still death-staring, You mine, motherfucker, wait and see, at Mickie.
-
- (vulgar, slang, by ellipsis) Used as a shortened form of the common interrogative phrases.
- The fuck was that?
- What the fuck was that?
- The fuck you think you are?!
- Who the fuck do you think you are?)
- The fuck?(said incredulously; also as what the fuck?)
- (vulgar, slang) Used to emphatically express that something isn't true.
- 1997, Robert Stone, Dog Soldiers, page 88:
- ‘You're not a self-respecting person.’
- ‘The fuck I ain't,’ the kid said.
-
Synonyms
- (intensifier used after interrogative pronouns): See Thesaurus:the dickens
Derived terms
- dafuq (said incredulously and used for less serious situations)
Related terms
Translations
Anagrams
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.