2jakes
I'll Lock Up
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- Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Are we not multiple generations?
Are you sure you want to board this train?
Cheers Big Don!
Are we not multiple generations?
However, all this probably encourages slang and colorful words on a massive level.
Which is exactly why I love English so, with all its dialects and crudities and pointed expressions. Prissiness has no place in a living language.
From what I saw of that show, the swearing was far less creative for the period than it should have been. Mark Twain would have said that they knew the words, but not the tune.
That use of F. as an all purpose intensifier is very much a mid-20th Century innovation. The producer of the show once said in an interview that he was deliberately anachronistic in the vocabulary he chose, because actual Old West swearing wouldn't have sounded dirty enough to modern audiences. It was far more built around blasphemy and attacks on the legitimacy and parentage of the target than the sexual scatologies popular today.
A few years ago there was a screening of the movie "Saving Private Ryan" for a studio audience of WWII veterans and afterwards, one of them said that he didn't think they swore that much. On the other hand, the level of swearing (meaning the use of vulgarity, not really swearing) in the movie "Full Metal Jacket" was exactly the way I remember everyone talking the same way when I was in the service and I wasn't even a Marine. Although I am a little embarrassed when people use a lot of vulgarity (swearing or otherwise), the way some people use it is positively hilarious.
In response to Lizzie's comments that posted before I finished this one, I'd agree that the way people swear or use vulgarity has changed and that what is done now that previously might have been censored is not really swearing in the strictest sense. We no long call on God to do our dirty work, you might say.
The language in this series of the West comes to mind.
Although perhaps a bit overcooked at times.
...On a side note ... has anyone heard "ya big galoot" in awhile? It was probably 40 years ago that I last heard it.
My girlfriend and I used to joke that Ian McShane's character Al Swearengen (intentionally named) used the F-word as every part of speech - noun, verb, adjective, adverb, etc., - and, if you add in c***sucker, you have basically exhausted his vocabulary.