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yiff

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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    Yiff was part of a range of onomatopoeic words from a pseudolanguage called Foxish used by the furry role-playing community, ostensibly created by a user named LittleFox or Foxen around 1990. Other terms used by this community included yip, yerf, yaff, yarf, growf, and growlf. Yiff originally meant yes or an exuberant hello. According to LittleFox, the sexual connotations of yiff were influenced by yipp (derived from yip), which originally held these sexual connotations.[1] By 1992, yiff had been assigned a meaning of a sexual proposition,[2] and in modern use within the furry subculture, yiff exclusively refers either to sex between anthropomorphic animals, or pornographic depictions thereof.

    Pronunciation

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    Interjection

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    yiff

    1. Onomatopeia representing the bark of a fox (especially while mating).
    2. (informal) Used to express happiness or to state that something is sexually appealing.

    Translations

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    Noun

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    yiff (usually uncountable, plural yiffs)

    1. (slang, informal) The bark of a fox.
    2. (slang, vulgar, informal) Sexual intercourse, especially between furries (fictional anthropomorphic animal characters or members of the community surrounding their celebration). quotations ▼
    3. (slang, informal) Pornography of or involving furries.
      Do you draw yiff?

    Translations

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    Verb

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    yiff (third-person singular simple present yiffs, present participle yiffing, simple past and past participle yiffed)

    1. (intransitive, slang, informal) To bark as or similar to a fox.
    2. (ambitransitive, rare, vulgar, informal) Of animals, especially foxes, to mate quotations ▼
    3. (ambitransitive, slang, vulgar, informal) Of furries, To have sexual intercourse. quotations ▼
    4. (intransitive, transitive, slang, informal) To propose cybersex to someone.

    Derived terms

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    Translations

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    References

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    1. ^ Speck [LittleFox] (10 December 2000), “yiff”, in Everything2, retrieved 30 March 2005
    2. ^ Joel K. Fur (22 December 1992), “WHY? (Moorcock, Car Wars etc)”, in rec.games.mud.tiny[1] (Usenet):Foxen [] people have TWISTED your legacy into something... naughty. Remember that Foxish language you went around using, the one with words like "yiff" and "yerf"? If I understand the current Furry thought correctly, "yiff" is now taken to stand for "young innocent furry f***able."

    Further reading

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    Anagrams

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    Middle English

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    Alternative forms

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    Etymology 1

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    From Old English ġif.

    Conjunction

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    yiff

    1. if quotations ▼

    Etymology 2

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    From Old English giefan.

    Verb

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    yiff

    1. alternative form of yiven quotations ▼