fuckling
English
Etymology
From fuck + -ling.
Noun
fuckling (plural fucklings)
- (slang, vulgar, derogatory) A stupid or annoying person.
- 2004, Penn Jillette, Sock, St. Martin's Press (2004), →ISBN, page 68:
- Stank had been a real fuckling — he was born and raised in the carny. Had never gone to school. He was illiterate.
- 2004 June 3, Somesappywriter [username], “Re: WHERE BABY KILLER [name redacted] LIVES”, in talk.abortion, Usenet:
- […] I mean, come on, it's total shit and worthy of chuckle or two at the expense of the fucklings who posted it!
- 2015, Emily Franklin, Last Night at the Circle Cinema, Carolrhoda Lab (2015), →ISBN, page 148:
- “But you're way invested in that fern.”
- “It's aloe, fuckling.”
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:fuckling.
- 2004, Penn Jillette, Sock, St. Martin's Press (2004), →ISBN, page 68:
- (slang, vulgar, derogatory) A child.
- 1999, Achmat Dangor, Kafka's Curse, Pantheon Books (1999), →ISBN, page 171:
- He could have been anyone, the product of a gene pool that is not unique, as intertwined as the history of our coming here, as slaves, as commercial subalterns of the white man's empires, as the fucklings of poor white women pressed into whoredom by impoverished families, nurtured on the sour grief of despoiled purity.
- 1999 February 23, Lisa, “Re: I did what I had to do”, in alt.support.childfree, Usenet:
- I'm SOOOOO tired of parents coming on here and "announcing" that they have kids, yet they see our point of view and can they participate??? Sooner or later, they just have to chime in that their little fuckling is not like that at all!!
- 2001 May 1, Denise F, “Ew!!! Extended BF on Inside Edition”, in alt.support.childfree, Usenet:
- They have a number of women who BF until the kids were 4 or 5 triumphantly declaring that this is their style of parenting and the fuckling is not ready to wean yet and they are comfortable with it.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:fuckling.
- 1999, Achmat Dangor, Kafka's Curse, Pantheon Books (1999), →ISBN, page 171:
Synonyms
- (child): see also Thesaurus:child.