Yiff vs Yiffed - What's the difference?
yiff | yiffed |
(onomatopoeic, apocryphal) Representing the bark of a fox (especially while mating).
(of a person, informal) To express happiness, to state that something is sexy.
(informal) A bark.
(slang, informal) The act of yiffing.
* '>citation
(slang, informal) Pornography of furries (fictional anthropomorphic animal characters).
(apocryphal) To bark (said of foxes).
(intransitive, of a person, apocryphal) To bark like a fox (especially in a sexual way).
(transitive, and, intransitive, slang, informal) To have sex, to mate (said of animals, especially foxes).
* '>citation
* '>citation
* '>citation
(transitive, and, intransitive, slang, informal) To propose cybersex.
(yiff)
:* "HE YIFFED ME IN THE MURR HOLE!!!!" — [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/alt.lifestyle.furry/msg/745a4023c3632640]
:* "Spam filtered AND slammed. Vixens yiffed ." — [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/news.admin.net-abuse.usenet/msg/7665be77a0de8553]
As verbs the difference between yiff and yiffed
is that yiff is to bark (said of foxes) while yiffed is past tense of yiff.As an interjection yiff
is representing the bark of a fox (especially while mating).As a noun yiff
is a bark.As an acronym YIFF
is young, independent, freedom-minded few (compare yuppie.yiff
English
Interjection
(en interjection)Noun
(en-noun)- Of course the inverse is possible with all these possibilities, and you can be having a yiff with a partner in the room with you and be having a pleasant non-sexual conversation with another remote player through a page-conversation.
- Do you draw yiff ?
Verb
(en verb)- Monsters snicker at me, succubi refuse to be seen with me, my dog tries to yiff my leg, shopkeepers say ‘No shirt, no shoes, no service’.
- And even if foxes are allowed to yiff more than once, I’d still have to wait for the vixen to come into heat.
- Well, i’ve witnessed male foxes queueing up to yiff one of my local vixens… repeatedly!
Derived terms
* yiffy * yiffer * yiffableReferences
*"Yiff", A Furry Glossary *
Definition of "yiff", Furtopia *
LittleFox’s own explanation of the etymology of "Yiff", Everything2 , accessed on 2005-03-30 (bottom of page)
Anagrams
* ----yiffed
English
Verb
(head)- quotations