frig
An act of frigging.
Interjection
- Euphemistic form of fuck
Origin
From Middle English friggen (“to quiver”), perhaps from Old English *frygian (“to rub, caress”), related to Old English frēogan, frīgan (“to love, release, embrace, caress”), frīge (pl., “love”). Compare also Faroese fríggj (“erotocism, sex, flirtation”), Old English ġefrīgian (“to embrace”). More at free. Alternative etymology derives frig (Early Modern English frigge), from Middle English frikien (“to keep (the arms and hands) in constant motion”), from Old English frician (“to dance”).
Noun Entry 2
- An act of frigging.
- A temporary modification to a piece of equipment to change the way it operates (usually away from as originally designed).
- I had to put a couple of frigs across the switch relays but it works now.
- A fuck.
- I don’t give a frig!
Forms
Noun Entry 3
- Dated spelling of fridge.
- "Perhaps you prefer beer - there's plenty in the frig." - 1936, F.J. Thwaites, chapter XIII, in The Redemption, Sydney: H. John Edwards, published 1940, page 139:
Origin
See fridge.
Forms
Verb
- To masturbate.
- She never forgot the day she was caught frigging herself in the library.
- There was an old parson of Lundy, Fell asleep in his vestry on Sunday; He awoke with a scream, "What, another wet dream, This comes of not frigging since Monday." - 1880, anonymous author, The Pearl:
- To fuck; to have sex.
- Come on, honey, let’s frig.
- Not that we didn’t frig in the day-time too. - 1988, Alan Hollinghurst, The Swimming-Pool Library, paperback edition, London: Penguin Books, →ISBN, page 113:
- To mess or muck usually with about or around'.
- Be sensible; you’re just frigging about now.
- To break.
- Where’s you get this ladder from? It’s frigged!
- To make a temporary alteration to something, to fudge, to manipulate.
- The system wasn't working but I've frigged the data and it's usable now.
Forms
Synonyms
fap pleasure oneself eff feck frack frak copulate with fiddle around fool around fuck around bodge patch