Demographics of cigarette smoking
23 hours ago
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11 comments:
loved this post!
Greetings from the ABC Team!
I'm not big on swearing either! I've felt pretty lucky that my 3 sons tend to turn to silly words when fighting.... " You Spinach Souufle"... You're such a Refrigerator Magnet!" They always end up laughing instead of bickering because of it!
Interesting post. Good choice for S.
This is a great post! Fun read!
I don't see a lot of need for it. So many nowadays use swearing as punctuation. Terrible.
I swear this is a superb post! :) How true that it was used for shock for so long that it's no longer shocking, just shows a lack of vocabulary, to be sure.
Very interesting. I never think about swearing...
Grew up in the 60's too! I am sure every now and again a "darn it donut" comes flying out.
Sherry
My potty mouth emerges when I'm driving...unfortunately! I personally think swearing is crass, so I hate it when I do it! I like Maria's kids' words.
Swearing is totally cultural, of course, and what's shocking in one place is benign in another. But when I moved to New Zealand I was shocked at the language—to use a phrase from my Illinois youth, they "swear like truckers".
New Zealanders use a lot of the same swear words as Australians, and quite a few from Britain (including all those you used when you were younger). A few years ago, the Broadcast Standards Authority had to rule on whether "bugger", used in an ad, was permissible; they ruled it was, as the word had lost its naughtiness over time.
I swear, so to speak, that New Zealanders' favourite word is what many Americans coyly call "the F word". You hear all sorts of people use it regularly, so much so that, as you suggested, it has no power anymore (except, maybe, when screamed at the top of ones lungs, which is surprisingly easy to do even though the word starts with a fricative).
I admit that in that regard at least, I've totally adapted to New Zealand language use, which makes me totally unremarkable. Bloody oath, mate!
I have worked in too many places where it becomes second nature. Even for the women around. I have really backed off, for many reasons. And this was before we started having children, which is an even bigger reason.
But this post reminds me of a funny story. When in sophomore English in high school, my teacher discussing "Cather in the Rye", which we were reading. He mentioned that the term "f*** you" didn't mean what it literally says, but should be taken more as "don't have a nice day". I still find it funny to this day, especially coming from such a well spoken man like our teacher, Mr. McMahon.
One might look upon swear words as spices in the language, but then from time to time the food may become over-spiced.
A curious thing about swear-words is that they are often culturally related. English/American words are often sexually related while ours are more often religiously related. Combinations makes for interesting reading and story-telling...
Ps thank you for the comment - most of them will be eaten around Christmas.
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