Tony in Tarzana
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,276
- Location
- Baldwin Park California USA
Can one say "Fakakta" (sp?) here? I like it, it has those "K" sounds, and as we all know, the "K" sound is funny.
Now those sound like some interesting curses to learn--willing to take on a somewhat older student, young lady?Viola said:I curse in Yiddish a lot, but I'm sad I can't remember the Italian my grandmother "taught" me as a kid. (By riding shotgun in her tiny, badly driven car. lol )
Viola said:Honestly when you hit a certain level of non-profanity it only makes sense on the Dukes of Hazzard.
"That low-down dirty skunk done robbed the orphanage! Let's teach him a dang lesson, Luke!"
dr greg said:I don't think there is a french equivalent of our favourite F-word, unlike German Dutch etc, which makes one wonder where the expression 'excuse my french' came from
Salv said:
So, class, culture and a whole lot of things go into what is, and isn't, considered profanity. I don't mind it in the movies if it is true-to-life or if used, even, for humor. I don't like anything over-used, including nasty language.
Mother remembers when her father reprimanded her for saying the word "Jazz," because, early in the last century, it meant the same as the infamous "F" word, but was also a growing musical form. The music won out. Now, hardly anyone is alive who thinks "jazz" is a dirty word.
karol
beaucaillou said:II have to disagree. If we were transported *back* we would be shocked to see what truly was: rampant, blatant, appaling racism and sexism, lecherousness, close-mindedness, exclusionary behaviors and community sanctioned stratification. True, along lines of profanity, perhaps we would be shocked, but I truly think it would have still been about context and relativism largely.
Nick D said:Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur.
Gilbey said:Just as Madonna french kissed Britney Spears on the MTV awards, she said, the more you let people see it, the more they will want it, until they will finally accept it.
Edward said:Experience has always shown me, however, that very many Europeans who have a first language other than English will swear in English when they feel the need for profanity. Part of the reason, as it was explained to me by a German, is that while most other European languages may have profane terms of their own, they don't often carry the same gutteral emphasis which makes the English variant so forceful in utterance.
Feng_Li said:When I lived in Germany, everyone around me seemed perfectly content to swear in German. [huh]