©1995-2006 HRSFA    Dictionary  Thesaurus  Encyclopedia  Web chat open mic

bc blogs, cop killer, freeblog templates, west, media analysis, 8 mile, sciforums, newsweekly, colombian, backstreet boys, ernie c, independent media, inside my head, girlfriend, gallery listings, bbc, web publishing tool, feature film drama, camera, mister dreamwhip, ray liotta, baby shirts, open mic, classified, The chat two seemingly contradictory hypotheses might reflect cultural and/or regional English dialects. Modern use and status In the modern English-speaking world, the word is chat usually considered chat highly offensive. English-speaking countries often censor it on television and the radio.Non-English-speaking cultures tend to recognize the word's vulgarity within many cultures. However, because the word has less effect, or there are no such censorship rules, they generally do not censor it. For example, American rap songs are frequently played, on European radio, without censoring the word "fuck." In one case, the album 97BT99 by Japanese rock group BUCK-TICK contains an errata sheet which includes correcting a song title from My Facking Valentine to My Fucking Valentine. It is clear that the misspelling was a typo and not censorship since that the song appears twice on the album and is spelled correctly on the package one of the two times it appears.Proof
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©1995-2006 HRSFA    Dictionary  Thesaurus  Encyclopedia  Web Home open mic Premium: Sign up | Login ADVERTISEMENT Dictionary - Thesaurus - Encyclopedia - Web Fuck For the musical group, see Fuck (band)."Fuck" is among the strongest, most controversial expletives in the modern English language and probably the most well-known vulgarism in the world. It is unclear when the word was expelled open mic from polite usage, becoming profane. Some evidence indicates that, in some English-speaking locales, it was considered open mic acceptable as late as the 17th century meaning 'to strike' or 'to penetrate'. http://dictionary.reference.com/help/faq/language/f/fword.html. Other evidence indicates that it may have become "vulgar" as early as the 16th century in England; thus other reputable sources such as the Oxford English Dictionary contend the true etymology is still uncertain, but appears to point to an Anglo-Saxon English origin that then in later times spread to the British colonies and worldwide.
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