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  2. Profanity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profanity

    Profanity is often depicted in images by grawlixes, which substitute symbols for words.. Profanity, also known as swearing, cursing, or cussing, involves the use of notionally offensive words for a variety of purposes, including to demonstrate disrespect or negativity, to relieve pain, to express a strong emotion, as a grammatical intensifier or emphasis, or to express informality or ...

  3. Bleep censor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bleep_censor

    Under the Ofcom guidelines, television and radio commercials are not allowed to use bleeps to obscure swearing under BACC/CAP guidelines. However, this does not apply to program trailers or cinema advertisements and "fuck" is bleeped out of two cinema advertisements for Johnny Vaughan's Capital FM show and the cinema advertisement for the Family Guy season 5 DVD.

  4. Wikipedia:Swearing is Permissible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Swearing_is...

    On the contrary, swearing is not prohibited in Wikipedia project spaces. While curse words should be used only with care, merely using a curse word does not, by itself, represent incivility . They are rarely encouraged , because while they may not be uncivil, they also seldom foster an environment of civility, but there are many times where ...

  5. Seven dirty words - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_dirty_words

    A poster in a WBAI broadcast booth which warns radio broadcasters against using the words. The seven dirty words are seven English language profanity words that American comedian George Carlin first listed in his 1972 "Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television" monologue. [1]

  6. Sam Hill (euphemism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Hill_(euphemism)

    Sam Hill is an American English slang phrase, a euphemism or minced oath for "the devil" or "hell" personified (as in, "What in the Sam Hill is that?"). Etymologist Michael Quinion and others date the expression back to the late 1830s; [1] [2] they and others [3] consider the expression to have been a simple bowdlerization, with, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, an unknown origin.

  7. Minced oath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minced_oath

    Writers sometimes face the problem of portraying characters who swear and often include minced oaths instead of profanity in their writing so that they will not offend audiences or incur censorship. One example is The Naked and the Dead , where publishers required author Norman Mailer to use the minced oath "fug" over his objections. [ 24 ]

  8. Norwegian profanity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_profanity

    Helvete means hell. Dra til helvete means go to hell. [10] Other common swear words include: Forpulte, literally meaning fucked or whore-like, from pule (to fuck). Satan, same as in English; used as an interjection or to refer to hell: gå til Satan means go to hell.

  9. Shut up - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shut_up

    More forceful and sometimes vulgar forms of the phrase may be constructed by the infixation of modifiers, including "shut the hell up" and "shut the fuck up". [8] In shut the heck up, heck is substituted for more aggressive modifiers. In instant messenger communications, these are in turn often abbreviated to STHU and STFU, respectively.