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How to NOT use bad words!

Created by pu2-ke-qi-ri

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Language Use
How to NOT use bad words game quiz
"Ever feel the need to use a bad word...without really saying it? "Linguistic taboo avoidance" is actually a common cultural phenomenon. Take this quiz to learn oodles and oodles of ways to NOT say bad words!"

15 Points Per Correct Answer - No time limit  



1. Every language has words that its speakers consider taboo-- unfit to be spoken, or at least not in "polite company." Which of these is NOT a reason why a word may be considered taboo?
    Lower classes tend to use it.
    It refers to an act that society considers taboo.
    The string of sounds in that word is intrinsically "dirty."
    The word has religious connotations.


2. The Oromo people of Ethiopia consider it taboo to speak the names of their relatives and in-laws. They even avoid saying "normal" words which sound similar to their relatives' names. Naturally, this causes a few problems, because these words are often common vocabulary items! Which of these strategies do they use for "linguistic taboo avoidance"?
    Any of these.
    Inventing nonsense words that sound vaguely like a relative's name or a word that sounds like it.
    Substituting synonyms for words that sound like a relative's name.
    Referring to a family member by their title or by the nature of their relationship.


3. Are some words so bad they could send you to Hell? Jesus said (Matthew 5:22) that if you call someone this really, really, really bad four-letter F-word, you "shall be in danger of hell fire."
    Fred
    Fart
    Fork
    Fool


4. Hell fire aside, bad words can bring a lot of publicity! George Bernard Shaw's famous 1910 play, "Pygmalion," was shocking in its use of vulgarity. What was the one word which generated so much controversy?
    Sorry, it's unprintable on a family site like Funtrivia!
    Bikini
    Bombed
    Bloody


5. The origins of one commonly used English taboo word are difficult to trace. This is partly because the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary considered the word too scurrilous to include when they first compiled volume "F." One of the earliest references to it occurs in a 15th century poem, "Flen flyys." What is so unusual about this reference?
    The word was blotted out. (Modern multispectral imaging has allowed us to read it again.)
    The poem is a liturgical work. (Apparently the word wasn't quite as taboo back then.)
    The word has been Latinized. (The poem is written in Middle English and really bad Latin.)
    It is noted simply as "ye f-wyrde." (It is also the first recorded use of that idiom for taboo avoidance.)


6. Mass media is notoriously averse to using taboo vocabulary. That said, in which English-language newspaper would you be likely to encounter "bad words" in print?
    The Guardian
    The Washington Post
    The New York Times
    The London Times


7. Typographical "bleeping," like replacing letters in a word with h-ph--s or ast*r*sks, has been around for a long, long time. When was the first recorded instance of this in English?
    1943
    1680
    1066
    1899


8. Of course, it is easy to OVERcorrect for taboo vocabulary. An overzealous censor bleeped out every instance of which word when editing "The Queen" for in-flight showings?
    Answer: (One word. "(Bleep) bless you, ma'am"!)


9. Using, or rather, mis-using, taboo vocabulary can come with serious political consequences. Just ask former Sen. George Allen (R-VA). His racist nickname for S. R. Sidarth, a democratic campaign worker who attended one of Allen's political rallies, probably caused Allen to lose the 2006 Senatorial race. This loss was what tipped the balance of power in the Senate to the Democrats.
    True
    False


10. One notorious racial slur (the one that starts with the letter between M and O), is sometimes considered "acceptable" if used by a member of that ethnic group, but "unacceptable" if someone outside that ethnic group says it. Enter "The Daily Show." Our white British friend Oliver needed to use this troublesome word, but he couldn't just come out and say it, could he? What did he do instead?
    He had Wilmore, an African-American man, speak the offending word when Oliver paused.
    He would just pause awkwardly, then move on with what he was saying.
    He held up a card with the offending word written on it.
    He would "speak" the offending word, but only in sign language.


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