frigging
frigging — adjective
- friggingpositive
- more friggingcomparative
- most friggingsuperlative
1. a swear word placed before a noun to show that the speaker feels extremely annoy
a swear word placed before a noun to show that the speaker feels extremely annoyed, frustrated, or angry about the thing they are mentioning
Ritu was furious when someone scratched her frigging new car.
frigging + noun (frigging new car)
Ziad could not find his frigging keys anywhere that morning.
The frigging train was delayed again without any warning.
Paloma told her brother to turn down that frigging music.
文法句型
frigging + noun
用法筆記
This word is considered offensive or vulgar by many people. It is milder than the strongest English swear words but is still not suitable for polite or formal situations.
常見錯誤
frigging — adverb
1. a swear word used before an adjective, adverb, or verb to strongly emphasize wha
a swear word used before an adjective, adverb, or verb to strongly emphasize what someone is saying, particularly when they feel annoyed or frustrated
Nikos thought the weather was frigging cold and put on three extra layers.
frigging + adjective (frigging cold)
Mira said the two-hour meeting was frigging pointless.
Andrew was frigging annoyed when the website crashed mid-payment.
Rachid could not believe how frigging slowly the queue was moving.
文法句型
frigging + adjective
frigging + adverb
用法筆記
This adverb form modifies adjectives, other adverbs, or occasionally verbs. It adds strong emotional force but does not change the core meaning of the word it modifies.
常見錯誤
frigging — verb
- friggingpresent simple I / you / we / they
- friggings3rd person singular
- frigginging-ing form
- friggingedpast simple
1. a vulgar old-fashioned word meaning to have sex with someone — now rarely used i
a vulgar old-fashioned word meaning to have sex with someone — now rarely used in everyday conversation, though it survives in some older books and historical texts
In some eighteenth-century novels, characters are described as frigging a maid or a servant.
frigging + direct object
Amani told her classmates the word used to mean frigging someone.
A tavern maid in 1732 complained the stable hand tried to frig her in the hayloft.
Romi laughed when she found the word meant to copulate in a slang dictionary.
文法句型
frig + object (transitive)
frig (intransitive)
用法筆記
This verb sense is now largely historical or humorous. Most modern English speakers use a different, much stronger four-letter word for the same meaning. The gerund form 'frigging' appears in this sense more often than the base form 'frig'.