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Contents. Offensiveness The word is considered obscene but is commonly used in many informal and familiar situations.
It is unclear whether the word has always been considered vulgar or, if not, when it first came to be used to describe (often in an extremely angry, hostile or belligerent manner) unpleasant circumstances or people in an intentionally offensive way, such as in the term, one of its more common usages in some parts of the. Some English-speaking countries censor it on television and radio. Andrea Millwood Hargrave's 2000 study of the attitudes of the British public found that fuck was considered the third-most severe profanity and its derivative motherfucker second. Was considered the most severe. Nevertheless, the word has become increasingly less vulgar and more publicly acceptable, an example of the ', wherein former vulgarities become inoffensive and commonplace.
According to linguist Pamela Hobbs, 'notwithstanding its increasing public use, enduring cultural models that inform our beliefs about the nature of sexuality and sexual acts preserve its status as a vile utterance that continues to inspire moral outrage.' Hobbs considers users rather than usage of the word and sub-divides users into 'non-users', for whom the word 'evokes the core sexual meanings and associated sexual imagery that motivate the taboo', and 'users' for whom 'metaphorical uses of the word fuck no more evoke images of sexual intercourse than a ten-year-old's 'My mom'll kill me if she finds out' evokes images of murder,' so that the 'criteria of taboo are missing.'
Because of its increasing usage in the public forum, in 2005 the word was included for the first time as one of three vulgarities in Canadian Press Caps and Spelling guide. Journalists were advised to refrain from censoring the word but use it sparingly and only when its inclusion was essential to the story. Etymology The states that the ultimate etymology is uncertain, but that the word is 'probably cognate' with a number of words with meanings involving striking, rubbing and having sex or is derivative of the word that meant 'to fuck.' Germanic cognates The word has probable in other Germanic languages, such as German ficken (to fuck); fokken (to breed, to beget); dialectal fukka (to copulate), and dialectal focka (to strike, to copulate) and fock.
This points to a possible etymology where fuk- comes from an root meaning 'to strike', cognate with non-Germanic words such as Latin pugno 'I fight' or pugnus 'fist'. By application of, this hypothetical root has the form. pug–. There is a theory that fuck is most likely derived from Flemish, German, or Dutch roots, and is probably not derived from an Old English root. Latin and Greek cognates There may be a kinship with the Latin ( futuo), a verb with almost exactly the same meaning as the English verb 'to fuck'. From fūtuere came French foutre, fotre, Italian fottere, futere, vulgar peninsular Spanish joder, foder, and the obscure English equivalent to, coined. However, there is no clear past lineage or derivation for the Latin word.
These roots, even if cognates, are not the original Indo-European word for to copulate, but argues that they derive from the Indo-European. b hu– or.
b hug– ('be', 'become'), or as causative 'create' see Young, 1964. A possible intermediate might be a Latin 4th-. fūtus, with possible meanings including 'act of (pro)creating'. However, the connection to futuere has been disputed— calls it a 'coincidence' and writes that it is not likely to have been borrowed from the precursors to fuck. Greek phyō (φύω) has various meanings, including (of a man) 'to beget', or (of a woman), 'to give birth to'. Its pephyka (πέφυκα) can be likened to 'fuck' and its equivalents in other Germanic languages. False etymologies One reason that the word fuck is so hard to trace etymologically is that it was used far more extensively in common speech than in easily traceable written forms.
There are several postulating an origin for the word. None of these acronyms were ever recorded before the 1960s, according to the work, and thus are. In any event, the word fuck has been in use far too long for some of these supposed origins to be possible.
Some of these urban legends are that the word fuck came from Irish law. If a couple were caught committing, they would be punished 'For Unlawful In the Nude,' with 'FUCKIN' written on the above them to denote the crime. A similar variant on this theory involves the recording by church clerks of the crime of 'Forbidden Use of Carnal Knowledge.' Another theory is that of a royal permission. During the in the, towns were trying to control populations and their interactions. Since uncontaminated resources were scarce, supposedly many towns required permission to have children.
Hence, the legend goes, that couples that were having children were required to first obtain royal permission (usually from a local magistrate or lord) and then place a sign somewhere visible from the road in their home that said ' Under Consent of King,' which was later shortened to 'FUCK.' This story is hard to document, but has persisted in oral and literary traditions for many years; however, it has been demonstrated to be an urban legend. A different false etymology, first made popular on the radio show, states that the phrase 'fuck you' comes from the phrase 'pluck yew' and relates the origins of fuck to the myth surrounding the. This myth states that English archers believed that those who were captured by the French had their and cut off so that they could no longer operate their longbows, and that the V sign was used by uncaptured and victorious archers in a display of defiance against the French.
The addition of the phrase 'fuck you' to the myth came when it was claimed that the English yelled that they could still 'pluck yew' ( wood being the preferred material for longbows at the time), a phrase that evolved into the modern 'fuck you'. Grammar Fuck has a very flexible role in English grammar, including use as both a and, and as an,. It can also be used as an and a. Linguist Geoffrey Hughes found eight distinct usages for English curse words, and fuck can apply to each.
For example, it fits in the 'curse' sense ('fuck you!' ) as well as the 'personal' sense ('You fucker'). Its vulgarity also contributes to its mostly figurative sense, though the word itself is used in its literal sense to refer to sexual intercourse, its most common usage is figurative—to indicate the speaker's strong sentiment and to offend or shock the listener. Early usage In 2015, Dr.
Claimed to have found '(possibly) the earliest known use of the word 'fuck' that clearly has a sexual connotation': in English court records of 1310–11, a man local to is referred to as ', probably a nickname. 'Either this refers to an inexperienced copulator, referring to someone trying to have sex with the navel, or it's a rather extravagant explanation for a dimwit, someone so stupid they think that this is the way to have sex,' says Booth. An earlier name, that of recorded in 1278, has been the subject of debate, but is thought by many to have had some separate and non-sexual origin. Otherwise, the usually accepted first known occurrence of the word is found in in a poem in a mixture of and English composed in the 15th century.
The poem, which satirizes the friars of, England, takes its title, ', from the first words of its opening line, Flen, flyys, and freris ('Fleas, flies, and friars'). The line that contains fuck reads Non sunt in coeli, quia gxddbov xxkxzt pg ifmk. The phrase ' gxddbou xxkxzt pg ifmk', here by replacing each letter by the previous letter in, as the English alphabet was then, yields the non sunt in coeli, quia fuccant vvivys of heli, which translated means, 'They are not in heaven, because they fuck the women of '. The phrase was probably encoded because it accused monks of breaking their vows of celibacy; it is uncertain to what extent the word fuck was considered acceptable at the time. The stem of fuccant is an English word used as Latin: English has many examples of writers using English words when they did not know the Latin word: ' workmannus' is an example. In the of this poem, the term wife was still used generically for 'woman'. 1503 poem 'Brash of Wowing' includes the lines: 'Yit be his feiris he wald haue fukkit: / Ye brek my hairt, my bony ane' (ll.
The oldest occurrence of the word in adjectival form (which implies use of the verb) in English comes from the margins of a 1528 manuscript copy of. A monk had scrawled in the margin notes, 'fuckin Abbot.' Whether the monk meant the word literally, to accuse this abbott of 'questionable monastic morals,' or whether he used it 'as an intensifier, to convey his extreme dismay' is unclear.
1598 Italian-English dictionary, A Worlde of Wordes, included the term, along with several now-archaic, but then-vulgar synonyms, in this definition:. Fottere: To jape, to sard, to fucke, to swive, to occupy.
Of these, 'occupy' and 'jape' still survive as verbs, though with less profane meanings, while 'sard' was a descendant of the Anglo-Saxon verb seordan (or seorðan, serða), to copulate; and 'swive' had derived from earlier swīfan, to revolve i.e. To swivel (compare modern-day 'screw'). As late as the 18th century, the verb occupy was seldom used in print because it carried sexual overtones. A 1790 poem by has a father upset with his bookish son say 'I'd not give a fuck for all you've read'.
Originally printed as 'I'd not give - for all you've read', scholars agree that the words 'a fuck' were removed, making the poem the first recorded instance of the now-common phrase 'I don't give a fuck'. Farmer and Henley's 1893 dictionary of slang notes both the adverbial and adjectival forms of fuck as similar to but 'more violent' than bloody and indicating extreme insult, respectively. Rise of modern usage Though it appeared in English lexicographer 1775 A New and Complete Dictionary, listed as 'low' and 'vulgar,' and appearing with several definitions, fuck did not appear in any widely consulted dictionary of the English language from 1795 to 1965. Its first appearance in the Oxford English Dictionary (along with the word cunt) was in 1972. The variant feck appeared in the, compiled by in 1900. Modern usage.
This section is about the English-language term. For other uses, see. 'Holy fuck' is an example of 'liturgical profanity' used interjectionally to express anger, contempt, disgust, or amazement. Usually vulgar. Noted by academics and used in literature, deriving its power from a combination of the sacred, and the profane, fuck. An exclamation, similar to ', but more offensive, also used informally for sex within a religious context. Machine mistranslation The word fuck occurs sometimes in Chinese/English bilingual public notices in China as a machine translation of the character (干), which replaced the three characters 干 meaning 'a pole', 幹 meaning 'to do' or 'to work' (and having a secondary slang meaning of 'to fuck'), and 乾 meaning 'dried'.
(Traditional Chinese 乾 can also be pronounced qian, which is a stem word meaning 'sky'.) Some examples are 'spread to fuck the fruit' for 'loose dried fruit', 'fuck to adjust the area' for 'dry seasonings section', and 'fuck the certain price of goods' for 'dry foods price counter'. The fault occurred in some versions of commonly used Chinese to English, for example Jīnshān ( 金山 = 'Gold Mountain'). F-bomb The term 'dropping an F-bomb' usually refers to the unanticipated use of the word 'fuck' in an unexpected setting, such as public media, a play on the nickname for the (the 'H-bomb') and the that using the word 'fuck' in discourse carries.
The term was first reported in a newspaper in 1988 when Hall of Fame baseball catcher used it. In 2012 it was listed, for the first time, in the mainstream. Censorship On August 19, 1969 the band played their song ' uncensored on, including the 1960s countercultural slogan 'Up against the wall, motherfucker!' (which was also at that time). This was the first appearance of the word on U.S. The word 'motherfucker' was also censored on the song's printed lyrics that came with the as 'fred.' Films edited for broadcast use matching so that will not be thrown off.
In the film, 's character repeatedly yells, 'This is what happens when you fuck a stranger in the ass' while trashing a car. It was censored on television as 'This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps.'
Freedom of expression In 1971, the decided that the public display of fuck is protected under the and and cannot be made a criminal offense. In 1968, Paul Robert Cohen had been convicted of for wearing a jacket with a slogan titled 'Fuck the Draft' (in a reference to conscription in the ). The conviction was upheld by the court of appeals and overturned by the Supreme Court., 403 U.S. Common alternatives. Main article: In conversation or writing, reference to or use of the word fuck may be replaced by any of many alternative words or phrases, including 'the F-word' or 'the F-bomb' (a play on ' and '), or simply, eff or f (as in 'What the eff' or 'You effing fool', 'What the F' or 'You f'ing fool'). Also, there are many commonly used substitutes, such as flipping, frigging, fricking, freaking, fudge, flaming or any of a number of similar-sounding nonsense words.
In print, there are alternatives such as, 'F.' , 'F––k', etc.; or a string of non- characters, for example, '@$#.%!' And similar (especially favored in ). A replacement word used mainly on the Internet is ', derived from the name of the Unix file system chec king utility. In the bowdlerized form ' (spelt ' in the ) was used as a substitute for fuck. The word was sometimes jokingly used as a curse by fans.
Similarly, the word 'frell' is used as a substitute on the TV show, and Dr. (played by ) has frequently used the substitute 'frick' on the TV show.
Stu Braudy, a recurring character on played by, is teased by for constantly using the substitute 'freak' ('Ahh, freak you!' The phrase is a common substitute for fuck in Ireland, where it is considered to be less rude, though still not acceptable in many contexts.
It has come into occasional use across the UK in the last 15 years as a result of its frequent use in the comedy series. Although the word is considered to be equally as rude as fuck, its appearance in Father Ted and in a ad suggest the opposite. See also. Sphinx Publishing. Hargrave, Andrea Millwood (2000). London: Advertising Standards Authority, British Broadcasting Corporation, Broadcasting Standards Commission, Independent Television Commission.
Random House. Presents hundreds of uses of fuck and related words., Practical English Usage, 1995,., Eros Denied: Sex in Western Society. Grove Press/Zebra Books, New York 1964., Psychology of the Unconscious: A Study of the Transformations and Symbolisms of the Libido. Moffat, Yard and Company, New York 1916. Translated by, M.D., Neurological Dept. Of and of the New York Post Graduate Medical School., Blue Streak: Swearing, Free Speech & Sexual Harassment, (1996). Chapters on famous swear words, including the f-word, and the laws pertaining to their use.
– documentary film by Steve Anderson ( 2005) External links.