English

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Etymology 1

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Blend of frisbee +‎ golf

Noun

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folf (uncountable)

  1. (sports, rare) Synonym of disc golf
    • 2004 April 7, Chris Dreyer, “'Folf': New, improved golf game putts around”, in The Gonzaga Bulletin[1]:
      On-campus folf consists of making your own course using landmarks, such as statues, buildings and the like as goals. Off campus, there are organized folf courses, such as the one at Riverview Country Club.

Verb

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folf (third-person singular simple present folfs, present participle folfing, simple past and past participle folfed)

  1. To play disc golf.
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Etymology 2

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Blend of fox +‎ wolf

Noun

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folf (plural folfs or folves)

  1. A hybrid between a fox and a wolf.
    • 2016 February 4, Kim Wall, “It's not about sex, it's about identity: why furries are unique among fan cultures”, in The Guardian[2]:
      Dogs and big cats never go out of style, though hybrids like “folves” (fox + wolf) and “drynx” (dragon + lynx) are catching on.