**** actually comes from roots meaning "Die before your time." Just thought I would throw that in there as a fun fact.
I personally think the stigma against swear words is rather silly but I am glad it is there because it makes them more colorful.
I think the stigma is silly, in part, because words on their own are so fascinating and I dont see the point in omitting them from the world if they still have a good use.
As an example, this passage refers to **** and was written by Lewis Thomas: (from
"Living Language", links to a blog, I dont know whose blog that is though and it is unrelated)
"It is a field in which the irresponsible amateur can have a continually mystifying sort of fun. Whenever you get the available answer to a straight question, like, say, where does the most famous and worst of the four-letter Anglo-Saxon unprintable words come from, the answer raises new and discomfiting questions. Take that particular word. It comes from peig, a crawling, wicked Indo-European word meaning evil and hostile, the sure makings of a curse. It becomes poikos, then gafaihaz in Germanic and gefah in Old English, signifying “foe.” It turned from poik-yos into faigjaz in Germanic, and faege in Old ‘English, meaning fated to die, leading to “fey.” It went on from fehida in Old English to become “feud,” and fokken in Old Dutch. Somehow, from these beginnings, it transformed itself into one of the most powerful English expletives, meaning something like “Die before your time!”
The unspeakable malevolence of the message is now buried deep inside the word, and out on the surface it presents itself as merely an obscenity."
This is funny because the word seems to have made some very daring jumps over its lifetime and it makes the age-old concept of a life-long feud at once prophetic and oddly paradoxical.
/hijack over
Keep the stories coming, anything left over from the tail end of this interview cycle?