fashy

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English

Etymology 1

From fash (fascist) +‎ -y.

Adjective

fashy (comparative fashier, superlative fashiest)

  1. (slang) Espousing, characteristic of, or relating to fascism.
    • 2017 August 17, Baynard Woods, “Are We Great Again Yet?”, in Salt Lake City Weekly, page 12:
      The space was filled with every variety of racist you can imagine, from the Nazi biker to the fashy computer programmer.
    • 2017 October 16, Andrew Marantz, “Birth Of A Supremacist”, in The New Yorker, page 26:
      One of its pages is set up to accept donations, in dollars or bitcoins; another is devoted to “fashy memes,” songs and images that extol fascism in an antic, joking-but-not-joking tone.
    • 2017 November 29, Brandon Soderberg, “Hi H8erz”, in Baltimore Beat, pages 21 and 24:
      In 2014, Drew Daniel, a Johns Hopkins professor and one half of the duo Matmos, put out "Why Do The Heathen Rage?" as the Soft Pink Truth, offering up queer avant-disco covers of black metal songs in order to celebrate and parody the music and in effect kill fashy black metal bullshit dead.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:fashy.

Etymology 2

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Verb

fashy (third-person singular simple present fashies, present participle fashying, simple past and past participle fashied)

  1. (transitive, Nigeria, slang) To ignore or forget (someone or something).
  • 2014, Emmanuel Kelechi Egbugara, The Brainless Beauty, Trafford Publishing, →ISBN, page 73:
    'My sister, let's fashy that angle,' said Ugomma. 'When did you see Emeka last?' she enquired from Mfon.
  • 2014, Nnaziri Ihejirika, A Rainy Season, FriesenPress, →ISBN, page 192:
    I tried to match her bonhomie, though something was definitely off. “Ah, of course now. You're pretty, and I have been trying to toast you, but you've fashied me.”