yes saying 'fech' to an Irish person is extremely insulting the ony reason i gues you have asked this for is that you have said it to an Irish erson, and in this case i am shocked its like telling someto go and die anyway i hope this helped from hedghog xx
Basically translates into - Go feck yourself.
no feck is not a swear word feck is slang.
Since I'm not Irish, any answer I gave you would by definition no longer be true, and even if I were, if you're not Irish and you used it, then again there's a problem here.If you want a stereotypical Irish saying, there's "Erin go braugh", which means "Ireland Forever".
Feck is a small media company based in inner Melbourne, Australia.
Feck is not a numeral, Roman or otherwise. It is a word with various meanings to the Scots (efficacy, amount, the greater part) and Irish (to steal or throw), but is probably better known for its indiscriminate use in the TV sitcom, Father Ted, as in "feck off", which is considered less offensive than the more obvious alternative spelling.
Modern Irish English 1. Verb meaning 'to steal' (e.g. 'They had fecked cash out of the rector's room. 2. Verb meaning in Irish slang 'to throw' (e.g. 'He's got no manners at all. I asked him nicely for the remote control, and he fecked it across the table at me.')
feck no
The feck are you talking about?
how the feck am a suposs 2 know that tWATs
feck u
Weak, unreliable, useless.
feck u