释义 |
▪ I. faugh, int.|fɔː| Also 6 fah, 6–7 foh, 7 fough. An exclamation of abhorrence or disgust.
1542Udall tr. Erasm. Apoph. 320 b, All y⊇ coumpaignie..crying foh at suche a shamefull lye. c1597Nashe Let. in Grosart Wks. I. Introd. 64 Had I beene of his [Sir J. Harrington's] consayle, he shold have sett for the mott, or word before it [H.'s Ajax], Fah! 1599B. Jonson Cynthia's Rev. iii. ii, Fough, he smells all lamp-oyle. a1679Ld. Orrery Guzman iv, Faugh, What an unsavory Smell assaults my Nose! c1680Hickeringill Hist. Whiggism, Wks. 1716 I. 108 Foh! no more of them. 1700Farquhar Constant Couple i. ii, Faugh, the nauseous fellow! he stinks of poverty already. 1832W. Irving Alhambra I. 291 ‘A monkey! faugh!..I hate the nauseous animal’. 1864Thackeray D. Duval vii, Faugh! the wicked little beast! ▪ II. faugh var. of fauch. |