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faik1, feck, fekkan, fak verb
1 to take: Ruffie feck me! [Devil take me!]; to steal 19-.
2 give: Smug the wee kinchen and faik it a wun to put in its femmel. [Kiss the small child and give it a penny to put in its hand.] 19. etymology: Cant ‘To take surreptitiously; to steal.’; also collected by Simson (1865) and attested by Galloway Tinkler-Gypsies; forms fekkan, fak collected by Joseph F G S Lucas from Kirk Yetholm Gypsies note:

Form feck attested by Canadian Paul Pope (2013) which he defines as: ‘take, fetch, give, get’.

faik2 verb kiss la19. etymology: origin obscure; only collected by Joseph F G S Lucas from Kirk Yetholm Gypsies
faik3 verb to come: Bing avree, there’s hantle [non-Travellers] faikin [coming]. 20-. etymology: origin obscure; perhaps connected with 1 and 2 above; only attested in the Kist of riches in a song by Jeannie Robertson