yiff

Etymology
Yiff was part of a range of onomatopoeic words from a pseudo-language called Foxish used by the furry role-playing community, ostensibly created by a user named LittleFox or Foxen around 1990. Other terms used by this community included, , , , , and. Yiff originally meant or an exuberant. According to LittleFox, the sexual connotations of yiff was influenced by (derived from yip), which originally held these sexual connotations. By 1992, yiff had been assigned a meaning of a sexual proposition, and in modern use within the furry subculture, yiff exclusively refers either to sex between anthropomorphic animals, or pornographic depictions thereof.

Interjection

 * 1)  Representing the bark of a fox (especially while mating).
 * 2)  To express happiness, to state that something is sexy.

Noun

 * 1)  Sex, especially between furries (fictional anthropomorphic animal characters, and/or members of the community surrounding their celebration).
 * "FurryMuck yiffs are like real-life yiffs - there is a time and place for everything." &mdash;
 * 1)  Pornography of or involving furries.
 * Do you draw yiff?

Translations

 * Dutch:, ,
 * Esperanto: jelp
 * German: ,
 * Icelandic: gagg
 * Japanese:
 * Portuguese:, auau
 * Spanish: yip
 * Yiddish: וויף


 * Esperanto: ĵifo
 * Finnish: turriporno
 * German: Yiff
 * Hungarian: yiff
 * Japanese: イッフ, ケモノタイ
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: yiff
 * Yiddish: ייִף

Verb

 * 1)  To have sex, to mate (said of animals, especially foxes, or people dressed up as animals).
 * 2) * "He's a furry fan and he's okay, He MUCKs all night and he yiffs all day." &mdash;
 * 3) * "Well, according to his sig, he waits until it moves before he yiffs it." &mdash;
 * 4)  To propose cybersex to someone.
 * 1)  To propose cybersex to someone.
 * 1)  To propose cybersex to someone.
 * 1)  To propose cybersex to someone.
 * 1)  To propose cybersex to someone.
 * 1)  To propose cybersex to someone.

Translations

 * Esperanto: jelpi


 * Dutch: seks hebben
 * Esperanto: ĵifi
 * French:
 * German:
 * Japanese: イッフする
 * Spanish: yiffear
 * Swedish: yiffa


 * Esperanto: ĵifi
 * Japanese: イッフする
 * Spanish: yiffear

Etymology 1
From.

Conjunction

 * 1) if

Etymology 2
From.