Dictionary Definition
freak
Noun
1 a person or animal that is markedly unusual or
deformed [syn: monster,
monstrosity,
lusus
naturae]
2 someone who is so ardently devoted to something
that it resembles an addiction; "a golf addict"; "a car nut"; "a
news junkie" [syn: addict, nut, junkie, junky] v : lose one's nerve; "When
he saw the accident, he freaked out" [syn: freak out,
gross
out]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- , /friːk/
- Rhymes with: -iːk
Noun
- A sudden causeless change or turn of the mind; a whim of fancy; a capricious prank; a vagary or caprice.
- In the context of "of a person": An oddball, especially in physiology; unique in a displeasing way.
- A person whose physique has grown far beyond the normal limits of muscular development; often a bodybuilder weighing more than 120 kilos (260 pounds).
- A person who has an obsession or extreme knowledge of a something.
- A very sexually perverse individual, usually used affectionately or in another good willed context.
Translations
a sudden causeless change or turn of the mind
- Finnish: oikku, päähänpisto
- Spanish: capricho
an oddball, especially in physiology
- Finnish: friikki, kummajainen, luonnonoikku
- Russian: урод
- Ukrainian: чудак
a person whose physique has grown far beyond the
normal limits of muscular development
a person who has an obsession or extreme
knowledge of a something
a very sexually perverse individual
- Finnish: friikki
Derived terms
Verb
- To make greatly distressed and/or a discomposed appearance
- 1994, James Earl Hardy, B-Boy Blues: A Seriously Sexy, Fiercely
Funny, Black-On-Black Love Story, (Alyson Publishing), page 107
- But after one night turned into five days, I was freaking out. I missed him.
- 1994, James Earl Hardy, B-Boy Blues: A Seriously Sexy, Fiercely
Funny, Black-On-Black Love Story, (Alyson Publishing), page 107
- To be placed or place someone under the influence of a psychedelic drug
- 1992, Peter G. Stafford, Psychedelics Encyclopedia, (Ronin
Publishing), page 56
- "[...] Harvard have compiled a list of LSD's contributions—largely missing before then—to our popular language: turned on, straight, freak, freaked out, stoned, [...]"
- 1992, Peter G. Stafford, Psychedelics Encyclopedia, (Ronin
Publishing), page 56
- To streak
- 1930, Robert Seymour Bridges, The Testament of Beauty: A Poem
in Four Books, (Literary Criticism), page 20
- "[...] in fine diaper of silver and mother-of-pearl freaking the intense azure; Now scurrying close overhead, wild ink-hued random racers that fling sheeted [...]"
- 1930, Robert Seymour Bridges, The Testament of Beauty: A Poem
in Four Books, (Literary Criticism), page 20
- To experience reality withdrawal, or hallucinations (nightmarish), to behave irrational or unconventional due to drug use.
- To react extremely or irrationally, usually under distress or discomposure
Extensive Definition
In current usage, the word freak is usually used
to refer to a person with an something unusual about their
appearance or behaviour. This usage dates from the so-called
freak
scene of the 1960s and 1970s. "Freak" in
this sense may be used either as a pejorative, a term of
admiration, or a self-description. It can also denote a strong
obsession with a particular activity, e.g., "He's such a
neat-freak" or "You're a singing freak". The term "freaky" can also
apply to a person who is sexually adventurous, or by itself as in
"She's a freak in bed".
An older usage refers to the physically deformed,
such as sideshow
performers. This has fallen into disuse, except as a pejorative,
and (among the performers of such shows) as jargon. A "freak" in this sense
can be formally defined as someone not falling within typical
standard
deviations. For example, people of small stature would not be
classified as freaks unless they are within the third standard
deviation for the general population, while the same principle
would apply to exceptionally tall people. Freaks of this kind can
be classified into two groups: natural freaks and made freaks. A
natural freak would usually refer to a genetic abnormality, while a
made freak is a once normal person who experienced or initiated an
alteration at some point in life (such as receiving surgical
implants).
"Freak" continues to be used to describe mutations in plants and animals, i.e. "freaks of nature."
"Freak" can also be used in a verb form, and can mean: "to become
stressed and upset". Usually, in this form, the word is followed by
"out" to complete the phrase, "freaking out". However, this meaning
and usage is usually considered slang. Adjectival forms include
"freakish" as well as "freaky." The verb "freaking" (or, "freaking
out") means "engaging in panicked or uncontrolled behavior"--for
example, as the result of psychedelic drug use. "Freaking" may also
be a minced oath
used in place of "fucking,"
e.g. "Oh my freaking God!"
The word is a homonym of "phreak" (referring to the illegal
hacking of telephone
systems), which it probably inspired.
History
In early science, there were many theories concerning the existence of natural abnormalities. Many of the theories led to pseudo-sciences that are still supported by some. One persistent pre-19th century superstition is that, if a pregnant woman is scared by someone or something, the child would be born with the quality of the source. (The widely accepted scientific theory regarding inherent qualities is that of mutation).In some religions since ancient times, the birth
of abnormal offspring has been associated with astrological events. Rues cited the recent
solar eclipses as reason for the increased number of mutated
infants born at that time. Karma is also
believed in some eastern religions to be a cause of abnormalities.
In other faiths, the cause is attributed to direct intervention by
the will of God.
Frank Zappa and the Freak Subculture
In the United States of the 1960s, especially during the heyday of the hippie counterculture on the west coast, many teens and young adults, disillusioned with the austere confines of the postwar, suburbanite American way of life and the resultant countercultural and New Left movements defined themselves as "freaks". Legendary American musician and composer Frank Zappa and his band The Mothers of Invention were central to the freak scene in the mid to late 1960s, both in the Los Angeles/San Francisco Bay Area music scene and in New York, where the band had a now infamous residency at the Garrick Theatre.The freaks, by Zappa's reckoning, resisted the
binaries of right versus left, dominant culture versus
counterculture, or squares
versus hippies,
preferring instead to align themselves with an aesthetic not
narrowly defined by fashion or political leanings. (There is a
certain irony here in that a freak was someone who resisted
labeling, while the idiosyncratic individuality of people who
deemed themselves freaks resulted in a shared identity among
members of the subculture). It also allowed
them to celebrate the freak identity, which until then was used to
describe perversions of nature or carnivalesque sideshows.
At the first Mothers of Invention concerts,
audience members were invited to "freak out!" (also the title of
the band's first album),
which meant to express themselves freely, be it through dancing,
screaming, or letting a band member spray them with whipped cream.
In terms of concert culture, the freak mentality influenced similar
bands of subsequent musical generations..
"Made freaks"
The word "freak" is also used these days by
people who intentionally choose to alter their physical appearance
by artificial means. The motivation for the change may be bravado,
a lifestyle choice (an
example of this is The Enigma,
rockstar Marilyn
Manson or the band Murderdolls), a
reaction to a disfiguring accident, an attempt to stay young, or a
symptom of body
dysmorphic disorder. There are various types of "made
freaks", each of which may be used to create an effect which
would make the person a freak.
Tattooing
Taken from the Tahitian word tatu or tatau, and incorporating Japanese traditional irezumi ("insertion of ink") methods, tattooing became very popular among sailors, and then caught on with bikers and others who like to have permanent artwork on their skin. Today "made freaks" are often associated with having excessive tatooing all over the body, as in the case of The Enigma.Punk Hair
Unusual hair coloring and styles such as spikes, mohawks, dreadlocks, and other uncommon styles designed to look as far from 'normal' hairstyles as possible, are still associated with punk, although those styles were not popular at the time of punk rock's emergence in the 1970s. It is possible to look at the 1961 movie The Rebel starring Tony Hancock and see representations of Paris artists with blue, green or crimson dyed hair and black clothing, parodying the antics of the surrealists or, looking back through old magazines and news items from the 1950s, to see news of British rock and roller Wee Willie Harris with his pink hair or Peter Sellers' early 60s comedy reference to a rock singer dying his "hair a luminous green" in the song "I'm So Ashamed".Piercing
Body piercing has been around since ancient times, and has been attributed mystical significance. These days, it is often regarded by those who use it as an enhancement of one's natural appearance, as with most forms of body modification. Piercing of the face (especially ears and lips) has been integrated into teenage fashion, along with the subsequent stretching of these piercings by inserting increasingly larger jewelry into the healed fistula.Cosmetic Surgery
Cosmetic surgery can refer to the simple removal of a scar, or it can be totally transformative.Medical Implants
Medical implants are becoming more common. Speculative fiction and futurology conjecture that this trend may continue to the point where the line between human and machine becomes very blurred. According to the philosophy of transhumanism, technologies such as cybernetics will enable humans to transcend their current physical limitations. The philosophy prescribes a new kind of evolutionary mutation which transcends biology.External links
freak in Catalan: Friqui
freak in German: Freak
freak in Spanish: Friki
freak in Galician: Friki
freak in Hebrew: פריק (סלנג)
freak in Japanese: フリーク
freak in Russian: Фрики
freak in Finnish: Friikki
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Bohemian, LSD user, aberration, abnormal, abnormality, abortion, acidhead, addict, aficionado, alcoholic, amateur, androgyne, anomalous, anomaly, aspirant, aspirer, atypical, authority, baroque, beatnik, bee, bigot, bizarre, boutade, brainstorm, buff, bug, candidate, capriccio, caprice, chain smoker, character, chimera, cocaine sniffer,
cokie, collector, conceit, connoisseur, coveter, crackpot, crank, craze, crazy idea, critic, crosspatch, crotchet, cubehead, curiosity, deformed, deformity, demon, desirer, deviant, devotee, dilettante, dipsomaniac, dissenter, dope fiend,
doper, dropout, drug abuser, drug
addict, drug user, drunkard, eager beaver,
eccentric, eccentricity, energumen, enthusiast, erratic, exceptional, expert, extraordinary, fad, faddist, fan, fanatic, fanatico, fancier, fancy, fantastic notion, fantasy, fiend, flake, flimflam, flower child, fool
notion, freak of nature, freakish, freakish inspiration,
freaky, glue sniffer,
great one for, grotesque, habitual, hankerer, harebrained idea,
head, heavy smoker,
heretic, hermaphrodite, hippie, hobbyist, hopeful, hophead, hound, humor, hype, idiosyncrasy, individualist, infatuate, inner-directed
person, irregularity, junkie, kink, kook, lover, lunatic fringe, maggot, malconformation,
malformation,
malformed, maniac, marijuana smoker,
maverick, megrim, methhead, misbegotten, miscreation, misfit, misshape, misshapen, monomaniac, monster, monstrosity, monstrous, mosaic, mutant, mutation, narcotics addict,
naysayer, nonconformist, nonjuror, notion, nut, odd, oddball, oddity, original, passing fancy,
peculiarity,
pillhead, pothead, pundit, pursuer, queer, quirk, rara avis, rare, rarity, recluse, rhapsodist, rococo, savant, scholar, screwball, sectarian, sectary, snowbird, solicitant, specialist, speed freak,
sport, strange, strange duck, sucker
for, suitor, swinger, technical expert,
technician, teratism, teratogenic, teratoid, toy, tripper, ugly duckling, unconformist, unexpected, unforeseen, unique, unparalleled, unpredictable, unpredicted, unusual, user, vagary, visionary, votary, wanter, weird, weirdo, whim, whim-wham, whimsy, wisher, yearner, yippie, zealot