Miscellaneous

What country in Europe swears the most?

What country in Europe swears the most?

The study also found that Romanian, Czech and Russian-speaking people tended to swear more than English, French and Spanish speakers.

Do people swear more in the UK?

The study, by Dr Robbie Love at Aston University, found there was a 27\% drop in swearing in Britain over the 20-year period, down from 1,822 to 1,320 swearwords per million. Men still swear more than women, and swearing still peaks in people’s 20s and declines thereafter, Love found.

Where in the UK swears the most?

1. Glasgow. We can reveal the city that sweats the most online is the Scottish city of Glasgow. With 52,100 members and nearly 516,000 comments, r/Glasgow averages an impressive 109 swears per 1,000 comments.

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What are British bad words?

The UK’s communications regulator, Ofcom, interviewed more than 200 people across the UK on how offensive they find a vast array of rude and offensive words and insults….Mild:

  • Arse.
  • Bloody.
  • Bugger.
  • Cow.
  • Crap.
  • Damn.
  • Ginger.
  • Git.

Is it bloody swearing in the UK?

Bloody is a common swear word that is considered to be milder and less offensive than other, more visceral alternatives. In 1994, it was the most commonly spoken swear word, accounting for around 650 of every million words said in the UK – 0.064 per cent.

Which country swears the most?

Obviously, there is no definite answer to this question as it would be almost impossible to record the amount of profanity spoken in each and every country. But the ones that most likely swear the most is the USA, Russia, and Ireland.

Why do the Brits say bloody?

Bloody. Don’t worry, it’s not a violent word… it has nothing to do with “blood”.”Bloody” is a common word to give more emphasis to the sentence, mostly used as an exclamation of surprise. Something may be “bloody marvellous” or “bloody awful“. Having said that, British people do sometimes use it when expressing anger…

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Is Bloody a curse word in the UK?

“Bloody” is no longer Britain’s most commonly used swear word, while the number of uttered expletives has dropped by more than a quarter in 20 years, a study has found. In 1994, it was the most commonly spoken swear word, accounting for around 650 of every million words said in the UK – 0.064 per cent.

Do the British swear more than the Americans?

No — the British swear more than Americans do and say the F-word more. I grew up partly in the USA and the UK, and the difference is easily noticeable even on an everyday level. Even on TV (such as talkshows), you’ll find British TV talkshows have more swearing (from the guests) than in American talkshows.

Are there any British words that are actually ‘swearier’ than they sound?

There are also words the British use that are actually ‘swearier’ — even less polite— than they sound to the American ear, simply because they are unfamiliar. Hugh Grant gets a huge laugh saying, “Bugger! Bugger!” to express frustration in Four Weddings and a Funeral, but, as Philip Thody describes in Don’t Do It!

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Why don’t Americans use the British swear word ‘blood’?

This is the risk with any good swear word: Overuse it and it loses its meaning. Still, to Americans bloody remains the quintessential British swear word, and one of the only ones they have not adopted themselves (except when they’re being pretentious or ironic). Both countries share a fascination with swear words’ that reference the male anatomy.

Why do Brits exchange jovial insults with each other?

Brits exchange jovial insults because we’re too uptight and emotionally stunted to say how we really feel. The stronger your friendship, the more you can lay into each other and still come away with a warm feeling. This is not how Americans roll.