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Educational Factoid of the Day

Posted in Random by Dan at 7:07 pm
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Perhaps one of the most interesting words in the English language today, is the word fuck. Of all the English words beginning with f, fuck is the single one referred to as the “f-word”. It’s the one magical word. Just by it’s sound it can describe pain, pleasure, hate and love. Fuck, as most of the other words in English, has arrived from Germany. Fuck from German’s “fliechen” which mean to strike. In English, fuck folds into many grammatical categories. As a transital verb for instance, “John fucked Shirley”. As an intransitive verb; “Shirley fucks”. It’s meaning is not always sexual, it can be used as an adjective such as; John’s doing all the fucking work. As part of an adverb; “Shirley talks too fucking much”, as an adverb enhancing an adjective; Shirley is fucking beautiful. As a noun; “I don’t give a fuck”. As part of a word: “abso-fucking-lutely” or “in-fucking-credible”. Or as almost every word in a sentence: “fuck the fucking fuckers!”. As you must realize, there aren’t many words with the versitility such as the word fuck,as in these examples used as the following words;

- fraud: “I got fucked”

- trouble: “I guess I’m really fucked now”

- dismay: “Oh, fuck it!”

- aggresion: “don’t fuck with me, buddy!”

- difficulty: “I don’t understand this fucking question”

- inquery: “who the fuck was that?”

- dissatisfaction: “I don’t like what the fuck is going on here”

- incompetence: “he’s a fuck-off!”

- dismissal: “why don’t you go outside and fuck yourself?”

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