Yuck

Interjection

 * 1) uttered to indicate disgust usually toward an objectionable taste or odour

Synonyms

 * ich
 * ew, eww
 * ugh
 * yech

Antonyms

 * yum

Derived terms

 * yucky

Noun

 * 1)  something disgusting
 * 2) * 2003, The New Yorker, 8 Dec 2003
 * I fetched an orange from a basket and peeled it [. . .] “Make sure you peel as much of the yuck off as possible,” she said. “I hate the yuck."
 * 1)  the sound made by a laugh
 * 2) * 2000, The New Yorker, 13 March 2000
 * Given this insecurity, the creators of “The Simpsons” took an extraordinary risk: they decided not to use a laugh track. On almost all other sitcoms, dialogue was interrupted repeatedly by crescendos of phony guffaws (or by the electronically enhanced laughter of live audiences), creating the unreal ebb and flow of sitcom conversation, in which a typical character’s initial reaction to an ostensibly humorous remark could only be to smile archly or look around while waiting for the yucks to die down.

Thesaurus
belly laugh, boff, boffola, burst of laughter, cachinnation, cackle, chortle, chuckle, convulsion, crow, fit of laughter, gales of laughter, giggle, guffaw, ha-ha, hearty laugh, hee-haw, hee-hee, hilarity, ho-ho, horselaugh, laugh, laughing, laughter, outburst of laughter, peal of laughter, risibility, roar of laughter, shout, shout of laughter, shriek, snicker, snigger, snort, tee-hee, titter, yuk-yuk

Interjection

 * Arabic: يع
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 惡心, 恶心,, , , ,
 * Czech:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: aĉ
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German: ,
 * Hebrew: איכס, פוי
 * Hungarian:


 * Icelandic:
 * Japanese: (also spelled:, , )
 * Norwegian: æsj
 * Persian: ایش
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: eca puh
 * Russian:, , фе, ,
 * Spanish: guácala, fuchi, fuchila, puaj
 * Swedish:, ,
 * Turkish:, , ıyk, ıyak

Verb

 * 1) to chuck, to throw
 * A yuckit it inti the bucket.

Noun

 * 1) a throw
 * 2) a small stone that can be thrown
 * Ye cin finnd yucks be the river.

Etymology
Presumably of the same roots as English chuck, itself from choque: (compare modern Norman chouque), from  *śokka (compare Breton soc’h: 'thick', Old Irish tócht: 'part, piece').