Swearing

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MintyTheCat
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Swearing

Post by MintyTheCat »

This always gets me thinking as to how each culture uses profanity.

This appeared on the BBC today:

http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/201511 ... -languages

I have to say that I cannot remember the last time an American actually swore but I do remember a rather bolshy, neo-femistic - "all men are scum!", "Kreuzberg forever!" kind of lady swearing at this bearded US bloke last year in Berlin and he didn't say anything that began to approach profanity to my absolute amazment as she was a real bitch :D

I swear all the time personally and have gone to such extents as simply not to learn how to swear in other languages to try to keep them clean (plus I would always make a silly mistake if I swore say in German).

So, what are your experiences in the art and use or profanity?

Cheers,

Minty.
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Skykid
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Re: Swearing

Post by Skykid »

Swearing is an art. I personally like to drop curse bombs where they have maximum effectiveness than wear them out through overuse.
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MintyTheCat
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Re: Swearing

Post by MintyTheCat »

My main rule is to not swear around children and teenagers.

I tend not to use the standard words either. There is greater wit than that.
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Xyga
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Re: Swearing

Post by Xyga »

This thread could get dirty. :P

To me there's a certain music to swearing, wethter I understand the language or not some of the effect is still there.

Spanish swearing often sounds like a slap to the face to me, Italian always mekes me think about soccer, Finnish which I've heard a few times at work sounds incredibly agressive, German sounds very reproachful and diminishing, English...I've heard too much of it so it doesn't have much effect anymore, but I like the funny counters like "How shall we fuck off O Lord ?"

I'm not very sensitive to my own language's swears because I'm used to hearing them, except the other-french variants, like Quebec which sounds quite funny and flow well inside an euro-French's ear.
Some African variants are totally mysterious to me because completely linked to local culture.
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null1024
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Re: Swearing

Post by null1024 »

Where I live down in south Florida, swearing is pretty common place.
That article is almost wholly alien to me, people say cunt relatively frequently and swear like sailors. Could just be that Americans try not to swear around people they don't know, could just be a different part of the US that they're writing about.

like,
This is not how Americans roll. Tell your US pal he’s a moron or anything stronger and you likely won’t get invited to his wedding.
is entirely different to what I've experienced my entire life, even when I lived up in PA. People mostly seemed to trade profanity-laden insults with each other because they were friends rather than being pissed.

As for me, I swear pretty frequently, almost entirely around friends though and pretty much never else, although some of the things I say are a little different [eg, "son of a slut" or "son of a whore" instead of "son of a bitch" -- can't remember why either].
also, as a kid, when I found out that "bugger" let me carry about as much meaning as the word "fuck" except that it didn't offend the American ear [people will often refer to kids in the US as "little buggers" for example], I began to use it constantly [and still do if I'm around people I probably shouldn't be dropping F-bombs around, I'll say it at work for example even though my manager says fuck pretty much all the damn time]

actually, the other "silly" sounding British swears were a good third of what would come out of my mouth after I was in 6th grade, like "bloody" and "sodding" :lol:
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kaicooper
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Re: Swearing

Post by kaicooper »

in my country ..swearing is a Myth
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