by FrigginPoet May 15, 2003
by John Gaskell June 06, 2004
To frig is to masturbate; it is NOT as so many mistakenly believe a more "polite" version of fuck. Friggin' is the same as wankin'. A wanker and a frigger are like A# and Bb (musical notes).
by roxed August 15, 2007
by Pygmon October 29, 2003
by whodey June 16, 2004
Used as a direct replacement for "fuckin'". Used primarilly for pussys who don't wish to be beaten by parents, teachers, or religious leaders for curseing in public.
Mom: Hello Tommy, How was school?
Tom: It was fucken...
Mom: What was that?!?
Tom: I meant it was friggin...
Beatings follow
Tom: It was fucken...
Mom: What was that?!?
Tom: I meant it was friggin...
Beatings follow
by Me bitch! August 15, 2003
Frigg was the goddess of marriage and justice. In Norse Mythology she was foremost among the goddesses and the wife of Odin (or Wodin). Thor was either her brother or stepson. Wednesday is named after Wodin, Thursday after Thor and Friday after Frigg.
The word frigg has nothing to do with wanking or fucking and is not a substitute for these pleasures of the flesh. Like many four letter words it would have passed down into modern usage from the Saxons/Vikings, and in sophisticated Norman England would have been considered as base and vulgar, a word used only by peasants.
The word frigg has nothing to do with wanking or fucking and is not a substitute for these pleasures of the flesh. Like many four letter words it would have passed down into modern usage from the Saxons/Vikings, and in sophisticated Norman England would have been considered as base and vulgar, a word used only by peasants.
Frigg had twelve handmaidens each with specialist powers. One of these for instance was Eir who was the god’s healer and it doesn’t take much imagination to visualise a hoary Viking banging his thumb while mending his shield and screaming out. “Oh Frigg, it hurt.” Thus hoping she would send Eir to ease his throbbing digit. Hence the modern expression, “Oh frigg it” when something goes wrong.
Similarly the same hoary Viking, when confronted with an enormous catastrophe like his longboat capsizing in the middle of the North Sea full of pillaged gold would have cried out, “Oh Frigg where are you. Have you deserted us? Well you can go and rot in Valhella” Obviously this is the root of the modern expression, “ Friggin Hell”, for something unbelievably surprising.
Similarly the same hoary Viking, when confronted with an enormous catastrophe like his longboat capsizing in the middle of the North Sea full of pillaged gold would have cried out, “Oh Frigg where are you. Have you deserted us? Well you can go and rot in Valhella” Obviously this is the root of the modern expression, “ Friggin Hell”, for something unbelievably surprising.
by Collers February 01, 2008