| There's a term for this: minced oath. |
https://www.cnn.com/2021/01/26/health/swearing-benefits-wellness/index.html Clearly you are not bright. |
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I like them. So colorful.
My favorite was a sweet old lady saying, " Oh, sugar cookies!" |
Ghetto. |
| I’d it is intended as a curse/swear word, it is. For those who think using geez or OMG are a get around the don’t use the Lord’s name in vain, they are not. So sayeth the parochial schools. I, however, think a four-letter Anglo-Saxon word is the most succinct and understandable way to express one’s feeling in certain situations. The further in my career I went and the more corporate higher-ups I worked with, the more common cursing was, particularly the use of the f-bomb. |
| I use pretend swear words because real ones will get me kicked out of a tennis match and I like playing tennis. |
I'm so glad I don't know you. |
| It's a Mormon thing, in my experience. But I have very little experience with it. Most people I know just curse. |
| The ole, swear words are for superior people, look at this article I linked to prove it, trope. Seems more of a chicken and egg, seek and you shall find situation. How can something used by everything from CEO’s to gangbangers be a sign of anything other than one’s willingness to recognize the rules of polite society? I hate the f bomb, using the crudest word available that is meant to demean the act of sex, and really works against women making it a function without connection, means you’re intelligent and inventive? Give me a good old, “burns my biscuits” any day. |
| I'm not going to swear around my kids. So, there are times when I say things like, sugar honey ice tea! Shut the front door. What the fudge! Oh. My. Goodness. 6 and 2 is 8! |
How do you know you don’t? |
Mormons come from flyover country. |
Definitely not true in my parochial school. I can still hear Sister Patricia letting out a loud "Oh my Geeze, young ladies!" |
And Jesus can see that they're swearing because the intent is there even though they use different words. Which are just random sounds. He also sees them soaking. |
| I feel like Mormon swear substitutes are more likely to be syllable-matching Ned Flandersisms of the "No hecking way!" variety. Southern ones are a little more baroque and stray further from the original obscenity/profanity. |