Prompted by another thread, I would love to have an interesting debate about why precisely we single out specific words as being "bad" when other words with the exact same meaning do not carry the same negative connotation.
For example: **** is bad, feces not bad. Same word, same denotative meaning, completely different connotations. Why precisely is the one bad and the other not?
I am also amused by the fact that "bloody" is considered a mild curse on the other side of the pond, which leads to the fact that one can't help but curse if one has been in an accident and is calling 911 or 999 (?) even if one is most polite. "911 What's the emergency?" "Well there's this woman lying on the side of the road and she's got oozing red liquid seeping from her" "You mean she's all bloody?"
GASP ..faint.
So please, someone, please tell me, why are some words bad, and some are not?
For example: **** is bad, feces not bad. Same word, same denotative meaning, completely different connotations. Why precisely is the one bad and the other not?
I am also amused by the fact that "bloody" is considered a mild curse on the other side of the pond, which leads to the fact that one can't help but curse if one has been in an accident and is calling 911 or 999 (?) even if one is most polite. "911 What's the emergency?" "Well there's this woman lying on the side of the road and she's got oozing red liquid seeping from her" "You mean she's all bloody?"
GASP ..faint.
So please, someone, please tell me, why are some words bad, and some are not?
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