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is frigging
verb
To fidget, to wriggle around
Exact(2)
"We want to start building the tools for this next generation of creatives, which is frigging everybody today," Gough said.
The Brazilians also spend an eerie amount of time focusing on Trudeau's mom, noting (again, via Google translate): "She had affairs with Ted Kennedy, Ronnie Wood and Mick Jagger," which, jokes on you guys, is frigging awesome.
Similar(58)
January was also disappointing, February was frigging desolate and March passed without a squeak.
Friday is Frig's Day, Frigedaeg, in Old English, Fredag in Danish, Freitag in Dutch.
She's joking of course, he's Jamie frigging Oliver; he's every mother-in-law's favourite son-in-law.
That's not an "only"; it's a frigging disaster that I still sense is getting a thin spin here.
On this front, Byron put the boot into what he perceived to be Keats's solipsistic sensitivity: "he is always frigging his Imagination... this miserable Self-polluter of the human mind".
Although we're now eight months further from the last IRL high-profile police-influenced death than when its pilot aired in February, to have the innards of an innocent civilian strewn over a central plot is pretty frigging brave.
Wall Street bankers, millionaires, and billionaires are doing even better than they did under President Obama, which for the record was pretty frigging great.
I hope so, because if you start now it's too frigging late.
Opening a bottle of Perrier seems more difficult these days, but I'm not sure that isn't those frigging French guys sticking the tops on tighter just to antagonise me.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com