[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

791.0. "Curses - soiled again" by COOKIE::DEVINE (Bob Devine, CXN) Mon Apr 30 1990 20:33

  Have we said our darnedest?  Does anyone blush at the mention
of certain words?  And, most importantly, is there any curse
that once can put feeling behind?

  Mass communciations have eviserated the shock of swearing.  Words
that shocked are now merely hollow, even when spoken by kids.  At
least the one good thing that could be said of Puritanism is that
there was always a word that one could find waaaay in the back of
your mind when you really had a need for a strong curse.  The
word "fuck" has been used as a noun, a verb, and a modifier in its
various forms so much that it is no longer startling to hear.
In fact, a movie is almost expected to have a least one "fuck" in
it to be considered properly realistic.

  Sooo, does anyone have a good curse for those hit-your-thumb-with-
a-hammer times?
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
791.1SSDEVO::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Mon Apr 30 1990 21:064
    "There are times, difficult times, when swearing
    provides a relief offered not even by prayer."
    
    					Mark Twain
791.2STAR::RDAVISBut there the resemblances endMon Apr 30 1990 23:2318
    Having made abundant use of the f-word since Jr. Hi, I find that
    variety is more important than strength of oath for cuss-cleansing of
    my soul.  "Holy cats" is a current favorite, as is "MOTHer of pearl!"
    
    "Johnny Dangerously" supplied the invaluable "farging bastridges" and
    may have been the source for "some of a bisque".  If you feel yourself
    running short of such exclamations, seek out a W. C. Fields film and
    take notes.
    
    Constructions like "Gosh darn motherf*er" can also be satisfying at
    moments of great emotion. 
    
    I disagree that the widespread reproduction of those words which were
    once encountered only live-and-in-yer-face has ruined the curser's
    craft.  It has only made it easier for the true masterpieces to live on
    - e.g., "Raging Bull"'s unforgettable "Your mother..." line.
    
    Ray
791.3creativity is allTLE::RANDALLliving on another planetTue May 01 1990 15:3514
    I suppose this is something you couldn't explain in a way that
    those of us who haven't seen the movie could, um, extrapolate?
    
    I still like the f-word, having come to its use relatively late in
    life.  
    
    I occasionally make use of an inherited favorite -- my
    grandfather's "Oh, damn it to hell in a loblolly."  (A loblolly is
    a small swamp or  an oversized mud puddle, the kind of thing you
    get in the Western US when water sits on clay/alkalai soils.  You
    can lose a logging truck in the bottom.  Don't know if there's an
    eastern US or standard English term for the same thing.)
    
    --bonnie
791.4TERZA::ZANEshadow jugglerTue May 01 1990 16:2522
   confound it!

   dadgummit!

   ferpete's sake!

   for crying out loud!


   I heard these while growing up and always thought they were funny.

   My mother says that when I was four years old, I would walk around the
   house saying, "Damn, damn, damn, damn."  Since that wasn't one of the
   chosen curses of my parents, she naturally wondered where it came from. 
   Then she remembered that we'd watched "My Fair Lady" a few days before. 
   That was one of Higgins' lines.  It's still one of my favorite
   expressions.


   							Terza

791.5SSDEVO::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Tue May 01 1990 17:413
    Re: .4
    
    Heavens, what a noise!
791.6Demmed censorsSTAR::RDAVISBut there the resemblances endTue May 01 1990 19:2326
�    I suppose this is something you couldn't explain in a way that
�    those of us who haven't seen the movie could, um, extrapolate?
    
    I will use the WW II film obscenity cipher ("lovin'" = f-word,
    "little-apples" = sh-word, "thing" = male-organ-word-beginning-with-d,
    etc.).

    (spoiler warning for those who haven't seen "Raging Bull" and have the
    good taste to hope to see it in the future)

    

    The scene:  At his wife's prodding, Jake LaMotta is calling his
    estranged brother from a pay phone.  When his brother picks up the
    phone, Jake doesn't say anything. 

    Brother:  "Hello...  Is that you again, Sal?  Sal, I'm gettin' real
    tired of this little-apples.  Jesus Christ...  OK, Sal?  Sal, listen
    very carefully." (Slowly and precisely:) "Your mother lovin' sucks
    lovin' big elephant lovin' things."
    
    Jake smiles and hangs up.

    The charm is lost in translation, I fear. 

    Ray
791.7KAOO01::LAPLANTEWed May 02 1990 15:128
    
    Can remember my father using the following "Holy sheepshit". 
    
    And, although not a curse, when he was exasperated everybody knew
    it because he would come out with "So help me piss in your cornflakes"
    I've no idea where it came from but it worked.
    
    Roger
791.8"I hope you die in pain"WELMTS::HILLCarpe diem!Wed May 02 1990 15:191
    
791.9dredged up from memoryTLE::RANDALLliving on another planetWed May 02 1990 15:456
    A history professor I used to know favored, "May your hamstrings
    snap at the moment of achievement."
    
    I don't suppose that would work on a hammer, however.
    
    --bonnie
791.10laughing through the painMYCRFT::PARODIJohn H. ParodiWed May 02 1990 22:3618
  This doesn't really count as a curse or even an exclamation but since
  the basenote asked about hitting one's thumb with a hammer (aka hitting
  the wrong nail), here goes.

  Long ago I worked for a house construction company.  One afternoon, I
  watched my boss attempt to bring a basement lally column to vertical
  with a prybar and a 3-pound hand sledge.  He managed to get his thumb
  between the bar and the sledge at just the wrong instant.

  Ed spent the next few minutes holding his thumb, bleeding, and moaning
  in pain.  At the end of this period he brought the injured thumb right
  up to his face and said,

  "Stop hurting, you sumbitch, or I'll hit you again."


  JP
791.11Verbosity in the face of painRUMOR::LEEWook... Like 'Book' with a 'W'Tue May 08 1990 00:549
I've been known to say the following after hitting my thumb with a hammer:

"Ooh, that really does hurt like crazy!" about ten time faster then 
I would normally talk.  I guess the operative word is "Ooh" though the rest
probably substitutes for a more common expletive.

My wife usually just says "Fudge!"

Wook
791.12Blood n' Sand !!!JANUS::CWALSHIf it's wind, I'll call it ShawThu May 24 1990 14:040
791.13Can't say it does much for me....CURRNT::PREECE27 8x10 Colour Glossy Pictures....Fri Jun 15 1990 11:4214
    I seem to recall that some college actaully got a grant to study
    the emotional release offered by curses, and took the trouble to
    break down the most popular one, to find out which syllables were
    most potent.
    They then "synthesised" the Ultimate Oath, guaranteed to provide
    the most release in the least words.
    
    It came out (yes, I _am_ going to tell you...) as something very
    like   "Oh, Baden Powell".   sadly, that very Christian gentleman
    founded the Scout movement, and it was felt to be in poor taste
    to suggest using his name as an expletive.
    
    
    Ian
791.14Careful, the cats are listening...AIMHI::TINIUSI didnt lose it, I just cant find itTue Jul 03 1990 21:0112
	"Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhugar!"

	Through tightly clenched teeth and usually hopping on one foot:

		"God Bless America!"

	And from Firesign Theatre:

		"Godfrey Daniel! (pesky redskins)"

Stephen
791.15Mort a Della! Salmagundi! Flotsam!STAR::RDAVISPolitics by other meansWed Jul 04 1990 18:538
�	And from Firesign Theatre:
�
�		"Godfrey Daniel! (pesky redskins)"
    
    And they, I believe, derived it from W. C. Fields in "My Little
    Chickadee".
    
    Ray
791.16MotherffffflowerWMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZLucien P. Smith say it be hardFri Aug 17 1990 17:480