Do you curse a lot?

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#1
Do you use curse words a lot? Do you dislike it when people around you do?

I grew up and now I almost never use curse words, it sometimes bothers me when someone does in casual conversations. It reminds me of the uneducated plebs.
But it's easier for me to use these words in English because mass culture is full of them, I suppose and they don't have a meaning that would be as strong and specific to low social class. So I'm curious - do you curse in your real lives?
 

Flipmo

VIP Member
Staff member
#4
On a serious note, there's a time to swear and there's a time for sophistication. It's kind of like how Dave Chappelle says that all blacks are bilingual; when they're with their homies, the slang comes out, but when you're in a boardroom, the educated discussion surfaces. I believe we're all like that to an extent. With you're with your friends, you're more likely to talk without worries, a need to impress, etc. When you're at work, or in school... you're more likely to be judged and face consequences for what is said, so you turn to an 'educated dialect', so to say.
 

Preach

Well-Known Member
#5
i do mo' cursing than a mufucka but it doesn't sound as good in norwegian.

it depends a lot on the situation. you say casual conversations so i don't know but i don't have a habit for cursing when i speak with people i don't know very well. to strangers i don't. i don't see the big deal about it though. different people choke on different things but i never had a problem with cursing. i can see if a person says "i feel uncomfortable cursing around other people" but i don't make up an opinion about people who curse unless they do nothing but curse. then i might wonder why their mouth is so foul. i don't see a connection between cursing and intelligence, although i'm sure there is a million surveys to back up the correlation. as with all things statistical, in this case there'll be smart people who curse a lot and stupid people who never curse, and a whole bunch of levels in between. i resent the notion, because i curse some times.

and i don't curse more if i'm, say, angry or sad, than if i'm happy. so i'll curse to exaggerate a point or to underline a joke, or because cursing can feel good, too.
 

S O F I

Administrator
Staff member
#6
I do curse a lot. I'm weirdly, immaturely, proud of it. I just wish I was a better communicator and had a larger vocabulary (of non-curse words) to choose from. But it comes with your territory. You can't grow up in a ghetto ass area and expect to speak completely different.Those who oppose cursing, for me, are in the same boat as bible thumpers. Actually, for some reason, most people strongly opposed to cursing are bible thumpers.

Also, educated, smart, rich people curse a lot too. In the Steve Jobs book, a lot of executives and CEOs curse. In the books on finance that I've read, a lot of CEOs and execs quoted curse too. It's only when you're a minor figure in a business that you have to maintain what Dave Chapelle talks about. You have to put it in the right context. He was giving advice to blacks, he wasn't talking about reality.
 

keco52

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#7
I don't really. (I know I do online. It's turned into a bad habit) Not in casual conversation anyway. It amuses me when other people do. Especially when they're mad...I have to keep myself from giggling.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#8
I guess it depends on your culture too. Here almost every pleb would curse a lot, more "serious" people almost don't. In Canada it still felt bad to me but not as bad mainly because it feels different in English, and it's a different culture "fuck", "asshole" or "crap" don't even sound like curse words to me. No agrressive/ pleb meaning to them. Even highly educated people use them from time to time and I don't mind that FROM TIME TO TIME. There it appears to work more to underline a joke or irony, or feelings.
I mean, I still rarely say that and would feel silly using curse words in a casual conversation, I wouldn't use curse words with girls too, I'd feel like an idiot.

Anyway I know people who speak like:
"so I fucking gave this sonofabitch some food and that retarded piece of shit dog didn't eat" - that sounds pretty ridiculous to me, even if you speak like that only to your homies.

But it comes with your territory. You can't grow up in a ghetto ass area and expect to speak completely different.Those who oppose cursing, for me, are in the same boat as bible thumpers. Actually, for some reason, most people strongly opposed to cursing are bible thumpers.
I grew up amongst people who cursed a lot, not nice at all. Not the best territory too. Personally I feel like I grew out of it and I dislike cursing now. It's something that I left in my past with shitty people and things that I used to do in the past. Maybe that's why it bothers me.
 

Flipmo

VIP Member
Staff member
#9
Saying FUCK helps alleviate the pain when you hurt yourself, or if you get capped by a drive-by shooting. It works in any of these contexts.
 

keco52

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#11
It sounds unnatural when I cuss. I say the curse word in a lower whispery tone. I think ppl made fun of me is why I don't do it.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#12
Saying FUCK helps alleviate the pain when you hurt yourself, or if you get capped by a drive-by shooting. It works in any of these contexts.
Yeah I used to say "Fuck" in Canada, it felt funny but that's what I said a lot when it was raining, I was all wet and had to walk for a few more hours to reach civilization. It didn't feel bad at all and it absolutely wouldn't bother me if others used that word in similar situations.
I wouldn't say "Kurwa" in Poland though, because our curse words have way more aggressive and uncultured meaning to them and I'd feel ridiculous. I'd probably pick a lighter semi-curse word.
I also wouldn't rant like "motherfucking rain, fuck you in the ass". But "fuck" doesn't sound that bad.
 

Flipmo

VIP Member
Staff member
#13
It's like in Croatian; swear words have a lot more aggressively to it, and it's a lot more dirty. Which is hilarious. :D
 

S O F I

Administrator
Staff member
#14
I just don't see the big deal, I suppose. The only big deal is that using them has consequences because of the views people like Masta hold.

I think the issue of curse words is in the same bucket as table manners and shit. Who gives a fuck about elbows on the table? I'll position myself the way I'm comfortable. There are too many pointless societal norms out there.

It was common back in the 50s in America to refer to your father as sir. So stupid. I'd have never done that.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#15
My dad swears like a sailor. Despite being highly respected by just about every one he meets, no one knows this side of him save for my mom, my sister, and I. And his parents and brother.

He doesn't swear all the time, but when he does, it's still rather casual. He could be describing a doctor he works with in the hospital that he doesn't like or talking about anything, in general, that he doesn't like. He'll let em fly. I learned all the Hindi/Punjabi swears by the age of four. I was reciting them to his friends by 6. And, amazingly, he would show me off when I did this and they'd all have a good laugh.

Which brings me to today, where I too have a sailor's mouth and I do swear uncontrollably. If anyone has seen the Spongebob episode regarding swearing, I (subconsciously) treat swears as "sentence enhancers." This began in college with my drunken rants that, again, had people gathering around for a listen, like I was reciting some epic tale.

It never really got me in trouble until college, where Facebook became more prominent. Posts on friends' walls with either M-rated pictures or posts in general had all my friends on edge. A new post on their wall by me, they told, had them in a frenzy to read it to make sure it wasn't ridiculous. Some even told me to calm down as their parents ended up seeing some of them. And my reaction, back then, was definitely denial/anger/backlash. I would stop posting on their walls completely. Feeling I was right.

In person, my friends did not mind. They assumed that was part of my nature and who I was. Their girlfriends also didn't make a big deal out it, although I'm sure they didn't like it. And it always seemed that when I first talked to a girl, I was shy and didn't let that side out until later. Then it scared them off when I did.

Some girls in school now took offense to my casual use of "bitch" and "cunt." They thought I was swearing directly at them when I'd say "bitch, don't make a big deal out of my swearing" or something like that. I had a smile on my face when I'd say it and I used to assume they knew I was joking. They didn't. They took it personally, and in hindsight, it makes sense. I would, ironically, say mean things with a straight face with the intention that they knew what I was saying wasn't true and I didn't mean it. Turns out I suck at reading human emotions.

So there was a fallout, but that's ok, they weren't great people to hang out with to begin with. I apologized to them, and it seemed to be ok for a week, until something else, I have yet to figure out, has them pissed off again. So I've left them completely.

So in conclusion, the Facebook situation and the real-life situation regarding swearing has progressively gotten better. I agree with whoever said swearing is the language of the peons. There is no need to use those words. Not to get all Freud on your asses, but a lot of the time it's anger that gets released through these words. Guess I was kinda angry the past few years. And it's such an ugly emotion that leads to the use of such ugly words. So in an attempt to not contradict my dashing good looks, I try to avoid using the vulgarities. Which, in turn, leads to less and less anger. I let things slide now, although it seems you end up alienating a lot of people along the way because they think something is wrong with you when you don't swear anymore and therefore talk less. But, that's a story for another day.
 

Preach

Well-Known Member
#16
So in conclusion, the Facebook situation and the real-life situation regarding swearing has progressively gotten better. I agree with whoever said swearing is the language of the peons. There is no need to use those words. Not to get all Freud on your asses, but a lot of the time it's anger that gets released through these words. Guess I was kinda angry the past few years. And it's such an ugly emotion that leads to the use of such ugly words. So in an attempt to not contradict my dashing good looks, I try to avoid using the vulgarities. Which, in turn, leads to less and less anger. I let things slide now, although it seems you end up alienating a lot of people along the way because they think something is wrong with you when you don't swear anymore and therefore talk less. But, that's a story for another day.
I think that just tilts the scale, and now you will eventually put up with so much you realize it's making your life less worth living. I say the trick is balance. You should exhaust negative emotions if you have them but be able to let things slide also. For me it's a day by day thing. On a shitty day I get pissed, on a good day I let things slide. Works fine for me.
 

Da_Funk

Well-Known Member
#17
Do you use curse words a lot? Do you dislike it when people around you do?

I grew up and now I almost never use curse words, it sometimes bothers me when someone does in casual conversations. It reminds me of the uneducated plebs.
But it's easier for me to use these words in English because mass culture is full of them, I suppose and they don't have a meaning that would be as strong and specific to low social class. So I'm curious - do you curse in your real lives?
I used to swear a lot. Back in the highschool/first couple years of university. Now, not very much. Why? Who the fuck knows.

I swear a lot when I'm drinking. And I swear a lot when I'm in the bush.

Swearing isn't a big deal to me, and when people around me swear I don't think I even notice. That being said, there are definitely situations in which a potty mouth makes you look like a goof.
 

Pittsey

Knock, Knock...
Staff member
#18
I used to have a large vocabulary when I was growing up. And I used to speak nicely.

However, I grew up in a place called Slough. And it wasn't very nice, still isn't. So I dumbed down, and because of the people I associated with my accent changed...

I have spent the last 5 years trying to increase my vocaulary and to pronounce my words correctly. Mainly as an example to my offspring, who is growing up in a middleclass area, and hopefully won't encounter the people and situations that I did.
 

ArtsyGirl

Well-Known Member
#20
On occassion, if I'm trying to emphasize something.

What bothers me is people who use fuck as a joining word every 5 seconds like "fuck man yeah this car fuckin came and I just fuckin yelled at that fuckin prick. Yeah I fuckin showed him" I seriously heard two guys talking like that on the bus. Forced me to turn my iPod on to drown their annoying conversation out.
 

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