76:, an heiress does not wish to make the commonplace statement that she is "engaged", nor "betrothed", "affianced", or "plighted". Though such words are not vulgarity in the vulgar sense, they nonetheless could stigmatize the user as a member of a socially inferior class. Even favored euphemisms such as
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The word most associated with the verbal form of vulgarity is "cursing." However, there are many subsections of vulgar words. American psychologist
Timothy Jay classifies "dirty words" because it "allows people interested in language to define the different types of reference or meaning that dirty
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novel, one character could be vulgar for talking about money, a second because he criticizes the first for doing so, and a third for being fooled by the excessive refinement of the second. The effort to avoid vulgar phrasing could leave characters at a loss for words. In
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words employ. One can see that what is considered taboo or obscene revolves around a few dimensions of human experience that there is a logic behind dirty word usage." One of the most commonly used vulgar terms in the
English language is
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From the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries, "vulgar" simply described the common language or vernacular of a country. From the mid-seventeenth century onward, it began to take on a
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aspect: "having a common and offensively mean character, coarsely commonplace; lacking in refinement or good taste; uncultured; ill bred".
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Blomquist, Robert F. "The F-Word: A Jurisprudential
Taxonomy of American Morals (In a Nutshell)." Santa Clara L. Rev. 40 (1999): 65.
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is the quality of being common, coarse, or unrefined. This judgement may refer to language, visual art, social class, or
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eventually become stigmatized like the words they replace (the so-called
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Victorian vulgarity: taste in verbal and visual culture
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Victorian vulgarity: taste in verbal and visual culture
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Victorian vulgarity: taste in verbal and visual culture
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Susan David
Bernstein, Elsie Browning Michie (2009).
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Susan David
Bernstein, Elsie Browning Michie (2009).
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Susan David
Bernstein, Elsie Browning Michie (2009).
86:), and currently favored words serve as a sort of "
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