Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Profanity
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
=== Anatomy and sexuality === [[File:En-US-get fucked.wav|thumb|The phrase "get fucked" spoken by an American]] Profanity related to sexual activity, including insults related to genitals, exists across cultures.{{Sfn|Van Lancker|Cummings|1999|p=84}} The specific aspects invoked are sensitive to a given culture, with differences in how much they emphasize ideas like incest or adultery.{{Sfn|Hughes|2015|p=xix}} Certain types of sex acts, such as oral sex, anal sex, or masturbation, may receive particular attention.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=41}} Verbs describing sexual activity are frequently profane, like ''fuck'' in English, {{lang|fr|foutre}} in French, {{lang|it|fottere}} in Italian, {{lang|es|jodido}} in Spanish, and {{lang|ru| ебать}} (''yebatˈ'') in Russian.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=39}} Words describing a person as one who masturbates are often used as terms of abuse, such as the English use of ''jerk-off'' and ''wanker''.{{Sfn|Hughes|2015|p=310}}{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=41}} Terms for sexually promiscuous women can be used as profanity, such English terms like ''hussy'' and ''[[slut]]''.{{Sfn|Hughes|2015|p=363}} Reference to prostitution brings its own set of profanities. Many profane words exist to refer to a prostitute, such as ''whore'' in English, {{lang|fr|putain}} in French, {{lang|it|puttana}} in Italian, {{lang|pl|kurwa}} in Polish, {{lang|ru| блять}} (''blyat''') in Russian, and {{lang|es|puta}} in Spanish.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|pp=36, 43}} Some languages, including German and Swedish, do not see significant use of sexual terms as profanity.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=39}} Profanities for the penis and vulva are often used as interjections. Penile interjections are often used in Italian ({{lang|it|cazzo}}), Russian ({{lang|ru|хуй}}, ''khuy''), and Spanish ({{lang|es|carajo}}). Vulvar interjections are often used in Dutch ({{lang|nl|kut}}), Hungarian ({{lang|hu|pisca}}), Russian ({{lang|ru|пизда}}, ''pizda''), Spanish ({{lang|es|coño}}), and Swedish ({{lang|sv|fitta}}).{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=38}} Such terms, especially those relating to the vulva, may also be used as terms of abuse.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|pp=38–39}} Profanities related to testicles are less common and their function varies across languages. They may be used as interjections, such as in English (''balls'' or ''bollocks''), Italian ({{lang|it|coglione}}), and Spanish ({{lang|es|cojones}}). Danish uses testicles as a term of abuse with {{lang|da|klotzaak}}.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=39}} Words for the buttocks are used as a term of disapproval in many languages, including English (''ass'' or ''arse''), French ({{lang|fr|cul}}), Polish ({{lang|pl|dupa}}), Russian ({{lang|ru|жопа}}, ''zhopa''), and Spanish ({{lang|es|culo}}). Similar words for the anus appear in languages like Danish ({{lang|da|røvhul}}), English (''asshole'' or ''arsehole''), German ({{lang|de|Arschloch}}), Icelandic ({{lang|is|rassgat}}), Norwegian ({{lang|no|rasshøl}}), and Polish ({{lang|pl|dupek}}).{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=38}} Excrement and related concepts are commonly invoked in profanity.{{Sfn|Ljung|2011|p=37}} European examples include ''shit'' in English, {{lang|fr|merde}} in French, {{lang|de|Scheiße}} in German, and {{lang|it|stronzo}} in Italian.{{Sfn|Hughes|2015|p=432}} An example in an East Asian language would be {{lang|ja|クソ}} (''kuso'') in Japanese.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)