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Swear words

(131 Posts)
thatbags Sat 18-Mar-17 13:07:23

Are 'shite', 'sucks', and 'boobs' swear words?

Deedaa Thu 30-Mar-17 20:20:52

Or make that sweary!

Deedaa Thu 30-Mar-17 20:19:57

I rather like white because in moments of stress you cam stretch it out over several syllables. I once shocked DH's cousin by saying bollocks which had never struck me as being very sweaty.

HootyMcOwlface Tue 21-Mar-17 20:07:12

Oh I say Gordon Bennett all the time! I didn't realise it was a real swear word. I do like to say knob-head too! (Usually under my breath)Haha! Very satisfying.

BlueBelle Mon 20-Mar-17 22:47:56

What about the slightly lesser nasty word instead of the c word tw.. I can't even say that one either but I can say all the men's bits without a problem I particularly like knob
It's funny that a lot of you see shite as worse than shit but I see it the other way round shite seems much less offensive to my ears just like feck sounds less harsh than the f word
I googled a Uk swear word list and was surprised to see Gordon Bennet is considered a mild swear word they also said C... was more offensive in US than UK

gillybob Mon 20-Mar-17 22:23:00

Sitting in a quiet pub with my dad last year he was telling me a story about someone or other and suddenly blurted out "......and I really couldn't give a toss" . The whole pub turned round and looked and I went terribly red. My dad looked at me and said "what?" I don't think he "got" what others were thinking or the meaning of the phrase he had used. blush

Chewbacca Mon 20-Mar-17 22:19:11

I was once worked with a woman who, in a fit of pique, called a female colleague a c**t. The whole office (both male and female) fell silent. It caused such a lot of trouble. The woman who'd said it was given a formal disciplinary notice (and subsequently left) and the whole company was called into a general meeting with HR and reminded of office respect and unacceptable behaviour that could be construed as bullying in the workplace. The whole atmosphere of the office changed considerably after that and I've never heard anyone repeat it.

Penstemmon Mon 20-Mar-17 22:14:54

I wonder why it does feel worse to hear people say , "you cunt" than "you cock" both of which I have heard on more than one occasion! I live in RL!

Both are words to describe genitalia but the female word is considered almost taboo whereas the male world is not!

rosesarered Mon 20-Mar-17 22:06:14

Me neither.Perhaps we move in rarified circles.

Ana Mon 20-Mar-17 22:04:17

I've never heard anyone say the c word in RL.

rosesarered Mon 20-Mar-17 22:02:54

Ana Londoners won't say that now, but they used to, certainly in the 1960's and early seventies.Although it's short for cock sparrer ( sparrow.) smile I had forgotten that until you mentioned it.smile

GrandmaMoira Mon 20-Mar-17 21:47:58

I think shite is a swear word, boobs is slang and had no idea sucks could be considered a swear word.

paddyann Mon 20-Mar-17 21:20:52

I dont swear ,never have ...well once when I was two ...my sister taught me the F word she'd heard it at school and I proudly showed it off at the dinner table.My dad was mortified ,took me out of the room and smacked me ...for the first and last time .He then sat beside me on the bed and cried with me.I remember it vividly and I've never used bad language since and no one who knows me would swear around me.My lovely dad used to blush when people swore around him or on TV .

norose4 Mon 20-Mar-17 21:07:31

Definitely hate the C--t word it's so commonly used these days , also it seems very derogatory to women although sadly many women say it ☹️ What would the suffragettes make of it all!

Ana Mon 20-Mar-17 20:58:59

Strange how different we all are. I've never thought of 'cock' as being anything like a swear word.

We call a spectacular mistake a cock-up, and don't some Londoners say 'All right, cock?'...

Coolgran65 Mon 20-Mar-17 20:50:13

I always thought that shite and shit were interchangable !!

My dh spent half his working life in the navy and the second half in the police force. His swearing is a work of art that decorates and adorns his speech.

I don't really swear. The occasional bloody, shite, feck. Strangely feck isn't really considered a swear word. I think shite is a crude word but not sure that it's a swear word.

I've only used the F word a handful of times when really displeased and wishing to make a point of just how displeased I was. Not in an angry shouty situation. It certainly got everyone's attention as it's not my normal language.

However, the C word is another matter, Never ever said it. Can't say it, Can't imagine under what circumstances I might use it - not even at a show of the Vagina Monologues smile

The other C word mentioned earlier, c**k as in being a part of the male anatomy, is another word that I hate. Can't say that one either. Actually it might be imo crude rather than a swear word. Yet I can quite happily when with my friends, call someone a dick-head. Only with close friends though as my general demeanor is really quite ladylike.

Barmyoldbat Mon 20-Mar-17 18:23:14

I was working for some trendy company with lots of trendy young people, the office being an open plan. One day I had just had enough of the language being used and shouted out "quiet everyone and listen, you all have degrees and yet the only word you seem know to express yourself is the f word so I reckon money on your education has been completely wasted so I think your parents should put in a complaint to the education dept. It did the trick. Saying that my favourite word is bastard, is that swearing?

thatbags Mon 20-Mar-17 17:42:53

I don't think anybody likes to hear unpleasant talk. Some of the unpleasantest has nothing to do with swearing and swearing has nothing to do with it. As somebody said up thread, it's the tone of what people say that matters, not just the words they use. What people mean when they say something is what matters. e.g. if someone says Fuck! when they drop a hammer on their toe what it means is that it was a shock and it hurt, nothing nasty at all (apart from the pain).

PRINTMISS Mon 20-Mar-17 16:15:14

I just think swearing in general has (like money!) lost it's value. So many people swear automatically, not in my house, that I no longer seem to be affected by it, whereas once upon a time I would have been offended by bad language. I don't swear, the other half doesn't not when I am around, and although I know my family do, never in my house. My son however, who cannot speak, can say Bugger beautifully when he bumps into anything, or when chopping wood catches his thumb. Such is life.

thatbags Mon 20-Mar-17 15:31:43

do you count the words in the OP as swearing, yorkshire?

Yorkshiregel Mon 20-Mar-17 14:23:54

The 'f' word is a definite no, no in my house. Unfortunately you cannot turn on the tv without hearing it in films/plays these days. No need for swearing. I don't mind 'blast' or 'bunnies' as my sil used to say, but I do not like the obscene words people seem to use without knowing they use them. I definitely do not like to hear little children swearing.

Yorkshiregel Mon 20-Mar-17 14:19:19

No need for swearing at all. I told my lot that it showed a lack of education, so they took it to heart and do not swear, not when I am about anyway.

granma47 Mon 20-Mar-17 10:24:40

I once made my 15 year old son take a t-shirt back to the shop as I was not going to sit and look at him with it saying 'mother fucker'. I love saying BALLS! as an expression.

thatbags Mon 20-Mar-17 09:23:36

My dad's go to swear expression was "Hell and Damnation!" Infrequent and effective.

Never heard my mum swear till she went back to teaching in a secondary school. Then we pretended to be shocked and told her That School was a bad influence wink

Maggiemaybe Mon 20-Mar-17 09:14:27

My dad - who reckoned he didn't swear and once stood up on a bus and demanded that someone stop swearing in front of women and children - actually had a couple of choice phrases when he hammered his own finger, electrocuted himself while mending something, nearly set fire to himself while searching for a gas leak with a lighter (you get the picture!). One was "damn it, blast it and bugger it to hell", which has gone into our family dictionary. I was shouting it once (I'd lost my keys again) when I walked into our hall to find DH and our new neighbour, who'd just called round to introduce himself.... blushblushblush

thatbags Mon 20-Mar-17 09:06:36

When I swear, gods don't come into it, whatever their historical importance in the words. So, by my reckoning, I can't "swear". I can speak with emphasis though, or with irritation, etc. And that's what I use the words that used to be swear words for.

So I haven't counted bloody as a swear word for decades.