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motherfucker查看 motherfucker 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • What is the origin and history of the word motherf---er?
    To appreciate the thrust of the insult motherfucker doesn't require knowledge of the technology, or culture, or local history of any particular milieu; the logic behind it is virtually ageless, because it is undergirded by a fundamental evolutionary truth, instinctually apparent to every creature since sex first came about — and that truth is
  • Sorry for the vulgarism, but is motherf**ker considered more . . .
    I would be as confused as your NH friend I've never seen motherfucker have any kind of racial connotation, except for the fact that it is stereotypically more closely connected with AAVE than other dialects (only stereotypically, mind—it’s used just as much in practice outside AAVE in my experience) I'd agree with your GA friend that it's not something you call people in polite society
  • meaning - What is the origin of the phrase hurt (s) like a bitch . . .
    Or are the later 'like a bitch motherfucker bastard' only anthropomorphic modifications of the 'hurt like hell' phrase? I doubt there's a clear-cut answer but it's an interesting conversation nevertheless
  • etymology - Cheaper by the dozen phrase origin? - English Language . . .
    The interview provides accounts for the origin of the terms honky and motherfucker Will edit the answer to address specifically how the motherfucker history resulted in cheaper by the dozen
  • Where did Pew! Pew! come from? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    To elaborate, I'm talking about the "sound effect" that people often make when imitating gunfire Eg "Pew! Pew! I shot you Billy, you're dead now!" I suppose this developed from the "Bang! Bang
  • Correct usage of replacing cuss words with symbols
    Standard practice is to substitute asterisk when replacing just some letters (especially vowels, and not normally the first or last letter) in a swear-word (for example - "sh*t", or "c**t") Any random combination of other "special" characters (including but not limited to #%!@?) may be used to denote "some unspecified swear-word" I think OP's specific example is at least "unusual" usage I
  • Why would anyone say Im a motherf***** starboy instead of Im a . . .
    Rather, a motherfucker is a person who defies social convention and norms - originally as a generic insult, then as a reference to something being tough or difficult, which then morphed into a description one might give themselves to show how unconventional and tough they were
  • What name for bowdlerisation with asterisks (e. g. , “f*ck”)?
    Those were: shit, fuck, piss, cunt, cocksucker, motherfucker, tits These words are still not used on the major American television networks or in some publications (national newspapers such as the "New York Times", etc ) One term invented in 1980 to describe textual symbols meant to represent profanities is "grawlix grawlixes"
  • american english - The meaning and cultural context of popped his . . .
    During this dialogue exchange, The characters say: – Hey, Old Reece still run the barber shop? – Like a ragged-assed motherfucker – He popped his membrane years ago! – No WAY I'd let that old fool near MY head The conversation appears to be in African American Vernacular English (AAVE) or a stylized colloquial register
  • Was The F Word in common usage in the 1800s?
    The usage of the “F”word as well as other swear words appears to be exaggerated and not historically correct, but effective from a fictional point of view as noted in the following extract by American lexical semantician and author Geoffrey Nunberg: If you have your characters use historically accurate swear words, they're apt to sound no more offensive than your grandmother in a mild snit





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