GoldenTouch
Shiny_Rock
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2018
- Messages
- 426
My mother (80, secretary of the year & a wordsmith) claims swearing is proof you have a poor vocabulary.
Haha yes I find some individuals from older generations feel that way.
But I agree with the following comments below.
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Swearing Like A Sailor May Not Be Such A Bad Thing
Swearing could actually be an emotional release valve and studies show that people who swear like a sailor are more honest and more intelligent.www.discovermagazine.com
"Studies have shown that swearing relieves stress, dulls the sensation of pain, fosters camaraderie among peers and is linked with traits like verbal fluency, openness and honesty. And the effects of cursing are physical as well as mental."
"People who are good at producing language are good at producing swear words,” adds Jay. “It’s not because they don’t have language — it’s because they have a whole toolbox full of words.”"
I think I am the minority who doesn't swear.
I don’t! I went to a Catholic elementary school run by tough nuns when I lived in Brooklyn..I got my mouth washed out with soap..and had to put my tongue on the blackboard. Those were the days!! I‘ve learned to not curse out loud because my son is Autistic..He will repeat everything and could get in trouble at his school..now job...pre-Covid..It was hard for my husband because he was in the Navy..I occasionally mumble some under my breath...Haha
At 4am I colored the air blue.![]()
make no mistake, we weren't allowed to say swear words, and I'm here to tell you, I've tasted enough soap as a kid when I did!
I got smacked but never had my mouth washed out with soap. Could you imagine getting either of those things done to us (if we were kids) today. Back then getting hit or having one’s mouth washed out with soap was no rare occurrence. :0
I do think there may be some regional and other factors involved. I live in the south and none of my friends or extended family use profanity as the norm. Certainly there might be a rare occasion in private, but it’s just not done in my circles. Maybe our pace of life is a little less stressful or something! (Don’t get me wrong, there certainly are people in the south who do.)
I find a perfectly placed swear word is often useful for emphasis or clarity in certain conversations! I must say I don’t like it when people swear every second word, as if they don’t know any other vocabulary. Tends to be from young men of a certain type and age in my area.
Like a sailor, but never around my parents/older folks/mixed company. Sampled too many soap bars as a kid, and still wouldn't put it past my mom today.
Haha @doberman..I say “Son of a B!”...just the letter!I'm from NJ; that should answer the question of whether or not I swear. However I have midwest relatives, and was actually born there, so I am often known to say "Oh for the love of Pete!", a favorite expression of my grandmother. This amuses my NJ-born husband to no end. Another favorite of mine is "Oh crumbs", a nod to James Herriot and my English ancestry. My kids and husband have picked up onthat one, calling unpleasant things "crumbish".
I do, as does my husband. So it's only natural that at age...18 months or so my daughter said "oh, f---." I ignored it and said "oh darn!" She continued to say it for months so I just ignored it. She hasn't said it in a while so I think she's forgotten. But I'm probably kidding myself. That kid has a mind like a steel trap and she'll probably drop an f-bomb at preschool in September after not having said it for almost a year.
At least we seem to have cleaned up our language at home, now.
Never too late to start learning...I think I am the minority who doesn't swear.