No, it is not an onomatopoeia
It is helpful if you're writing an essay. It counts as a compositional risk.
Yuck, that smell is awful.
varoom
Taiga, moose are one of the few animals that actually eat conifers (yuck yuck yuck, what a thought)
Yuck! is a book that was written by James Stevenson.
yuck or yuk - it's onomatopoeia - you spell it how its sounds.
Yuck is an interjection denoting disgust for/regarding a certain thing.
I was offered some blubber to eat, but my reaction was yuck.
Yes, the term 'yuck factor' is an informal compound noun; a combination of the noun 'yuck' and the noun 'factor' that forms a word with its own meaning.
No, yuk or yuck, is an English word.The Hebrew word for yuck is eechs (איכס)
yes,in the episode ''falling yin love'' when yin was lieing to yuck that she likes him he was happy
A yuck factor is the disgusting part of the nature of something, a facet of something which makes it repulsive or distasteful.