*nods grimly* |
Ha! |
| It would not bother us. It seems like a weird thing to obsess about. They're just words, and not even "bad" ones. |
So weird. The actual intent behind fu*k, frick and heck is exactly the same. Is it the resonance of the specific syllables that creates a problem or is it the idea itself? I just don’t get it. |
| OP, my 10 year old girl said this for the first time today and I told her she needs to stop immediately. Frick = F*ck and it's wrong Gand inappropriate. I'm okay with "heck" but typically we say something silly like "what the puppy?" and I much prefer that. |
There's some evidence that swear words share some linguistic patterns across language. In English we tend to swear with hard consonants. https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/10/world/swear-word-similarities-cec |
None ok. |
So say we all! |
Everyone knows what frick is substituting for and kids don’t need training wheels cursing. So either allow actual curse word or don’t. |
| It looks and sounds very low class to have a little 7 year old saying frick. Put an end to it now. |
No. We use the curse words correctly, or we don't use them at all. Teach them right! |
| Introduce a non f alternative for him to use. |
Imagine them sounding and/or appearing 'low class', oh the horror!! I bet all the parents at the country club would gossip endlessly about their kid and his their foul language. |
You should totally own it. Teach your third grader to call people "motherfrickers"' and to tell people to "fack off" |
| I tell my 7 yo she needs to know her audience. She can say whatever words she wants in front of me. I have told her it is my job to help her understand appropriateness and context. If she is caught offending a teacher, friend or whatever, she is in trouble, not for language but for not being respectful. I do not give the language itself much power. |