#1 2025-06-21 12:57:15

Almost two billion words — just under 600 of them swear words — were carefully assessed, and the United States then handed the dubious honor of being the most cursing country in the English-speaking world, at least online. . . .

And in face-to-face interactions, the American stereotype for conservatism is evident. "Face-to-face, the Americans are way down the list," Schweinberger said. "But social media basically had the same pattern that we find in general online data."

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#2 2025-06-21 18:28:45

The appendix of vulgarities is interesting. I wonder who actually considers "idiot" a vulgarity?

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#3 2025-06-22 13:30:49

BorderCountess wrote:

The appendix of vulgarities is interesting. I wonder who actually considers "idiot" a vulgarity?

Any mention of the words that were formally technical terms in legal and psychiatric contexts like, retard, idiot, moron is now taboo.

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#4 2025-06-22 16:26:31

Baywolfe wrote:

BorderCountess wrote:

The appendix of vulgarities is interesting. I wonder who actually considers "idiot" a vulgarity?

Any mention of the words that were formally technical terms in legal and psychiatric contexts like, retard, idiot, moron is now taboo.

I believe the correct response here is, "Well, that's retarded."

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#5 2025-06-23 08:34:38

BorderCountess wrote:

Baywolfe wrote:

BorderCountess wrote:

The appendix of vulgarities is interesting. I wonder who actually considers "idiot" a vulgarity?

Any mention of the words that were formally technical terms in legal and psychiatric contexts like, retard, idiot, moron is now taboo.

I believe the correct response here is, "Well, that's retarded."

Yeah, I still use retard a lot.

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