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Definition 2024
feck
feck
See also: féck
English
Noun
feck (plural fecks)
- Effect, value; vigor.
- 1996, David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest, Abacus 2013, p. 64:
- some of which have earned a small academic following for their technical feck and for a pathos that was somehow both surreally abstract and CNS-rendingly melodramatic at the same time.
- 1996, David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest, Abacus 2013, p. 64:
- (Scotland) The greater or larger part.
- Robert Burns
- the feck o' my life
- Robert Burns
Derived terms
Verb
feck (third-person singular simple present fecks, present participle fecking, simple past and past participle fecked)
Quotations
- For usage examples of this term, see Citations:feck.
Etymology 2
Alteration of ****.
Verb
feck (third-person singular simple present fecks, present participle fecking, simple past and past participle fecked)
- (euphemistic, chiefly Ireland) **** (except literally).
- 1970, Tim Pat Coogan, The I.R.A.:
- As Charlie Murphy put it to me, 'When the bishops called down fire and brimstone not a man stirred but when Joe Christle fecked off half the shagging IRA followed him!
- 2004 May 29, “A real thorn in the side; Profile : Diarmuid Gavin”, in The Herald:
- It didn't stop him turning to a reporter, saying "feck it" and nipping out anyway to talk to friends.
- 2011 January 6, Erwin James, “One dangerous lady”, in Sydney Morning Herald:
- "My family were Irish," she says, "and the use of the word 'feck' was normal but, of course, as a child, I thought it was a swear word. My first day at Holycross I heard the nuns saying feckin' this and feckin' that and I thought, 'Oh my God, they're all swearing'
- 2011 January 6, “A year to look forward to”, in Galway Advertiser:
- the year gets off to a flying start when the words 'Oh feck' are uttered collectively by two million as the January wage sheets are handed out and the true realisation of the Budget kicks in
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