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Please dont report, i realy want to know the origan of these words, why are they bad, whare did they come from?
fυck
shιt
αss
bιtch
dιck
nιgger

2006-07-18 17:10:28 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

skeet

2006-07-18 17:24:34 · update #1

5 answers

What you are looking for are called Etymologies. It means where a word comes from. You can look up all the bad words you like at the sites posted below. Then you won't have to post them here.


F uck

The root is undoubtedly Germanic, as it has cognates in other Northern European languages: Middle Dutch fokken meaning to thrust, to copulate with; dialectical Norwegian fukka meaning to copulate; and dialectical Swedish focka meaning to strike, push, copulate, and fock meaning penis. Both French and Italian have similar words, foutre and fottere respectively. These derive from the Latin futuere.

S hit-
**** is a very old word, with an Old English root. *Scítan is the Old English word. It has cognates in most of the other Germanic languages and shares a common Germanic root with modern equivalents like the German scheissen.

*Scítan, however, doesn't appear in extant Old English texts and is only assumed to have existed in Old English. The verb to **** dates the Middle English period (c. 1308), and the noun form is from the 16th century. The interjection is of quite recent vintage, not found until the 1920s.

a ss--
slang for "backside," first attested 1860 in nautical slang, in popular use from 1930; from Amer.Eng. pronunciation of **** (q.v.). The loss of -r- before -s- attested in several other words (e.g. burst/bust, curse/cuss, horse/hoss, barse/bass). Indirect evidence of the change from **** to *** can be traced to 1785 (in euphemistic avoidance of *** "donkey" by polite speakers) and perhaps to Shakespeare, if Nick Bottom transformed into a donkey in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (1594) is the word-play some think it is. Meaning "woman regarded as a sexual object" is from 1942. Asshole first attested 1935.

b itch--
O.E. bicce, probably from O.N. bikkjuna "female of the dog" (also fox, wolf, and occasionally other beasts), of unknown origin. Grimm derives the O.N. word from Lapp pittja, but OED notes that "the converse is equally possible." As a term of contempt applied to women, it dates from c.1400; of a man, c.1500, playfully, in the sense of "dog." In modern (1990s, originally black English) slang, its use with ref. to a man is sexually contemptuous, from the "woman" insult.
"*****. A she dog, or doggess; the most offensive appellation that can be given to an English woman, even more provoking than that of whore." ["Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue," 1811]
The adj. bitchy "bad-tempered" (usually of females) is first attested 1925. The verb meaning "to complain" is at least from 1930, perhaps from the sense in bitchy, perhaps influenced by the verb meaning "to bungle, spoil," which is 1823. But bitched in this sense seems to echo M.E. bicched "cursed, bad," a general term of opprobrium (e.g. Chaucer's bicched bones "(unlucky) dice"), which despite the hesitation of OED, seems certainly to be a derivative of *****. Insult son of a ***** is O.N. bikkju-sonr. Slang bitchen "good" is first attested 1950s. *****-goddess coined 1906 by William James; the original one was success.

D ick-
Dick, as you probably know, is not only slang for "penis", but also anickname for "Richard", a common male name in English.

From 1553 onwards, we can see refereces to "dick" as a "fellow/lad". It probably existed beforehand: " and so most of the slang senses are probably very old, but naturally hard to find in the surviving records. " (Online Etymology Dictionary, "dick",
). The first evidence of "dick" as referring to a penis is from 1891, in
British army slang.

*** ger-
This most offensive of words in American speech dates back to the late 16th century, although the modern spelling doesn't appear until two centuries later. The OED2's earliest cite of the modern spelling is from 1786 in Burns's Ordination. (The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang, however, claims that this is an editorial error and Burns's original manuscript uses the older niger.) The obsolete spelling niger dates to 1574. It comes from the Latin meaning black. It shares this common root with *****.

In the 20th century of course, it has become extremely offensive. It, along with "cu nt" are just about the only taboo words in American discourse today (it's interesting that the most offensive terms have strong racial or gender discrimination components). About the only acceptable use is in Black English when African-Americans use it to refer to themselves. (There is a similar reclamation of the word queer among homosexuals to rob the term of its offensiveness of the term by using it to refer to themselves.)

skeet
form of trapshooting, 1926, a name chosen as "a very old form of our present word 'shoot.' " Perhaps O.N. skotja "to shoot" (see shoot) was intended.

2006-07-18 17:16:53 · answer #1 · answered by 5cent Frog 3 · 0 0

from some people a long time ago when they said, lets have words that offend stupid people....they're just words people...four letters on a non-tangible object anymore...it usede to be on paper...but now, c'mon its not even something you can touch and keep without the power on...

2006-07-18 17:16:23 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

wikipedia.org

just type the word and it'll give you the info.

Good luck.

2006-07-18 18:00:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

go look in the trash and gutter

2006-07-18 17:14:02 · answer #4 · answered by Farhat 1 · 0 0

lets see how long this will last...

2006-07-18 17:14:15 · answer #5 · answered by Lily 5 · 0 0

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