1598. Shakspeare, 2 Henry IV., II., 1. I have borne, and borne, and borne, and have been fubbed off, and fubbed off from this day to that day.
1604. Marston, Malcontent, i., 3. O no; but dream the most fantastical. O heaven! O fubbery! fubbery!
1619. Fletcher, Mons. Thomas, ii., 2. My letter fubb'd too.
1647. Cartwright, Ordinary iv., 4. I won't be fubbed.
Fubsey or Fubsy, adj. (old).—Plump;
fat; well-filled. Fubsy
dummy = a well-filled pocket
book; fubsy wench = a plump
girl.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
1825. English Spy, I., p. 188. Old dowagers, their fubsy faces, Painted to eclipse the Graces.
1837. Marryat, Snarley-yow, I., ch. viii. Seated on the widow's little fubsy sofa.
Fubsiness, subs. (common).—Any
sort of fatness.
Fuck, subs. (venery).—1. An act
of coition. For synonyms, see
Greens.
2. (venery).—The seminal fluid. For synonyms, see Cream.
Verb. (common).—To copulate. For synonyms, see Greens and Ride.
c. 1540. David Lyndsay, 'Flyting with King James.' Aye fukkand like ane furious fornicator.
1568. Clerk, Bannatyne MSS., Hunterian Soc. Publication, p. 298. He clappit fast, he kist, he chukkit, As with the glaikkis he wer ourgane; Yit be his feiris he wald haif fukkit.
1568. Anonymous, Bannatyne MSS., Hunterian Soc. Publication, p. 399. 'In Somer when Flouris will Smell.' Allace! said sch, my awin sweit thing, Your courtly fukking garis me fling, Ye wirk sae weill.
1598. Florio, A Worlde of Wordes, Fottere. To jape; to sarde, to fucke; to swive; to occupy.
1620. Percy, Folio MSS., p. 459. [Hales and Furnivall, 1867.] A mighty mind to clipp, kisse, and to ffuck her.
1647-80. Rochester, 'Written under Nelly's Picture.' Her father fucked them right together.
1683. Earl of Dorset, 'A Faithful Catalogue.' From St. James's to the Land of Thule, There's not a whore who f
s so like a mule.c. 1716-1746. Robertson of Struan, Poems, 256. But she gave proof that she could f
k, Or she is damnably bely'd.1728. Bailey, English Dict., s.v. Fuck . . . Feminam subigitare.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue. F
k, to copulate.c. 1790(?). Burns, Merry Muses. And yet misca's a poor thing That fucks for its bread.
Fuckable, adj. (venery).—Desirable.
Also Fucksome.
Fucker, subs. (common).—1. A
lover; a fancy Joseph (q.v.).
2. (common).—A term of endearment, admiration, derision, etc.
Fuck-finger, subs. phr. (venery).—A
fricatrix.
Fuck-fist, subs. phr. (venery).—A
frigster (q.v.); a masturbator.
For synonyms, see Milkman.
Fuck-hole, subs. phr. (venery).—The
female pudendum. For
synonyms, see Monosyllable.
Fucking, subs. (venery).—Generic
for the 'act of kind.'
1568. Scott, Bannatyne MSS., Hunterian Soc. Publication, p. 363. 'To the Derisioun of Wantoun Wemen.' Thir foure, the suth to sane, Enforsis thame to fucking . . . Quod Scott.