ananı sikeyim
What does ananı sikeyim mean? ananı sikeyim is a Turkish nuclear that translates to “fuck your mother / motherfucker” in English.
Literal Translation
let me fuck your mother
Meaning & Usage
"fuck your mother / motherfucker"
Direct threat to violate someone's mother. One of the most provocative things you can say in Turkish.
Examples in the Wild
Ananı sikeyim! (Fuck your mother!)
When to Use It
Context
- Expressing strong frustration or emphasis
- Only among very close friends who share this register
- Direct confrontation (use with caution)
Avoid
- Professional or formal settings
- Around elders or authority figures
- Public spaces — will cause genuine offense
- Almost any situation — this is as offensive as it gets
- Mixed company or unfamiliar social groups
- Job interviews, meetings, or customer-facing situations
Cultural Context
Mothers are sacred in Turkish culture. This is among the most fighting-words level insults. Will almost certainly provoke a physical response if said seriously.
More in Turkish 🇹🇷
View all →amına koyayım
“motherfucker / fuck / damn it”
One of the most versatile and commonly used Turkish curses. Can express frustration, anger, disbelief, or be directed at someone. Often abbreviated as AMK.
ukala
“smart-ass / know-it-all”
Calling someone a pretentious know-it-all.
kaşar
“slut / worn-out whore”
Literally a type of cheese, used to call a woman promiscuous or 'experienced'. Implies she has been 'processed' or 'used'.
lan
“dude / man / hey”
Informal way to address someone. Friendly among close friends, aggressive or disrespectful from strangers.
piç
“bastard”
Calling someone illegitimate. Attacks their parentage and family honor.
halamın taşakları olsaydı amcam olurdu
“if my aunt had balls she'd be my uncle / if ifs and buts were candy and nuts”
Sarcastic response to hypothetical or 'what if' statements. Implies the hypothetical is absurd.
gavat
“cuckold / pimp”
A man who knowingly tolerates his wife's infidelity or profits from it. Implies the ultimate failure of masculine honor.
hayvan herif
“you brute / you animal”
Intensified form of 'hayvan' with 'herif' (fellow/guy) added for emphasis.