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teaching the use of the F word
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dyak



Joined: 25 Jun 2003
Posts: 630

PostPosted: Tue Dec 30, 2003 3:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

BethMac wrote:
OK, I'll bite...what's the difference?

Compare:

After searching in vain for a toilet, the drunk Scotsman decided to take a p�ss by the side of the road.

Jim was offended when the lads laughed at his new haircut, but his girlfriend reassured him that they didn't mean it and were only taking the p�ss.

Definitely not interchangeable... Wink
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BethMac



Joined: 23 Dec 2003
Posts: 79

PostPosted: Tue Dec 30, 2003 7:50 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm not sure I completely get the meaning of "taking the piss" from your example. Is it the same as "just kidding"? I have a feeling I'd screw that one up so I'm better off not using it. Confused
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Phil_b



Joined: 14 Oct 2003
Posts: 239
Location: Back in London

PostPosted: Tue Dec 30, 2003 8:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Taking the piss = making fun of
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Stephen Jones



Joined: 21 Feb 2003
Posts: 4124

PostPosted: Tue Dec 30, 2003 8:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

To take the piss is the same as to take the mickly. It means to make fun at somebody else's expense.
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leeroy



Joined: 30 Jan 2003
Posts: 777
Location: London UK

PostPosted: Tue Dec 30, 2003 11:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Swearing, I believe, began in London. May I?

(to) take the (f*cking) piss. verb

1. to make light of a humourous event, often at s/body's expense; "When we found him with his pants-round his ankles and fast asleep we couldn't help but take the piss..."

2. to make unreasonable demands; "Teach for �10 an hour? You're taking the f*cking piss!"

3. to describe an undesirable or unenviable situation; "It really took the piss when the c*nt that stole my wallet ended up shagging my girlfriend too."
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dmb



Joined: 12 Feb 2003
Posts: 8397

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 12:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Leeroy, surely you're taking the piss. Swearing began in London. I don't belive you. I can't back up my disagreement. Etymologists, Can you back Leeroy up. Where did swearing begin. I reckon it started with the cave men as in "Ah F.u.c.k. That's hot. Oh look Let's call this fire."
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leeroy



Joined: 30 Jan 2003
Posts: 777
Location: London UK

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 12:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Oh yeah dmb! Before London, swearing simply didn't exist. Neither did rain, actually, slow trains or ugly girls...
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dmb



Joined: 12 Feb 2003
Posts: 8397

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 12:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wow. You learn something new every day. I thought ugly girls started in Scotland. When did you send them north?
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FGT



Joined: 14 Sep 2003
Posts: 762
Location: Turkey

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 1:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The word "swearing" seems to crop up quite a lot in this thread.
If I say "F*** off!" or "F*** you!", I consider I'm swearing. If I say "The film was F***ing brilliant" or "That was f***ing hard work" I don't see that as swearing, it's using the vernacular (to harp back to a previous thread).

I liked the way the original poster presented these words (mostly phrasal verbs) to his students, "don't use it, understand it". It seems to me that some of us who call ourselves teachers could also use the lesson.

I'm amazed that people using this site don't know what the idiom "to take the piss" means. Those of us from non-US origins who teach English for a living take pains to teach US/UK and other Englishes. When will our American brethren follow suit (at least as far as their own language acquisition is concerned)? Then it's up to the individual, and the circumstances, whether or not they decide to teach it to their students.
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guty



Joined: 10 Apr 2003
Posts: 365
Location: on holiday

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 1:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

now now leeroy, dmb,
lets not be pedantic about this, there is not one part of said islands which does not have all the aforementioned in abundance
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mjed9



Joined: 25 Oct 2003
Posts: 242

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 2:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

All these swear words

"P1ss" "Sh1t" and F*ck"

are old pre Norman words used generally by all anglo-saxons with none of the emotional content they are now afforded.

When William the Conqueror came into power in 1066 he decreed that these words belonged with a lower class of people and instigated a change. His reign introduced "urinate" "defecate" and "fornicate" and from about that time forward these other words became "bad".

At least that's what I read somewhere (on the back of a postage stamp)
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nomadder



Joined: 15 Feb 2003
Posts: 709
Location: Somewherebetweenhereandthere

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 2:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

FGT, the reason others don't know Brit idioms is they just have not been exposed to them. I'm glad BethMac had the courage to ask. I happen to like British TV, movies and and books. In North America you can obviously seek out the books if you want but the other thngs aren't as abundant as they should be.

I think there is a cable station now with lots of BBC type stuff but I'm not sure. Otherwise it's PBS and Are You Being Served? rerereruns for the most part. I remember learning the word s.h.a.g. from AB Fab and I was well into my 20's then. I would love to see more British stuff but it isn't happening right now. And what happened to the music for that matter? Have you let Britney et al take over? Help stop American Cultural domination please.

That rant over, imagine hearing daily English and yet not knowing any swear words. You'd often be in the dark. The f word is used in so many ways. It's fact of life whether we like it or not. Meanwhile how many words are banned here in this forum? It doesn't seem right somehow. English teachers who have lots of their lingo censored even when used in everyday expressions.

Trying to get swear words from the Japanese was impossible but according to a book I had, there are tons of them.
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leeroy



Joined: 30 Jan 2003
Posts: 777
Location: London UK

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 4:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I find the beep machine here to be patronising - and somehow very "American". I don't need to be protected from bad words, and am responsible enough to use them, well, responsibly. (Most of the time, anyway Wink).

Similarly I think it is also patronising to "shield" students from swear words, they frequently occur in real life - and I have never heard students use them innapropriately. To my joy, a Japanese student reported that he had gone to the pub the day before, and exclaimed "What the f*ck man, it was like, �3.20 for a beer!?". It was perfect - far better and far more natural than "The pub which I went to was prohibitively expensive".

Swear words, functionally, usually express an extremity of some kind, a sort of intensity - they add a subjective slant to the speaker's message - attaching extra meaning often in the form of opinion or attitude towards (typically) the object. Consider the differences...

Where are you? / Where the f*ck are you?
What's that? / What the f*ck's that?

By ignoring these differences, you are depriving students of large chunks of functional English - and the cultural aspects that resonate underneath them.

My (poor) initial outings in Spanish have been heavily laced with expletives (er.... "Tienes un culo putamente grande!"). A strong (and often amusing) message is easier for me to remember than "Can you direct me to the post office?" - though it is somewhat lacking in practicality... Smile

I can speak for Britain when I say that swearing is integral to our culture - and a pre-requisite to achieving any level of fluency in English involves awareness of linguistic-cultural elements such as "f.ucking rain again!". So, in my context at least, yes I won't shy away from swearing.

With a class of Korean 10 year-olds, though, perhaps a different strategy is in order...
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johnslat



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 13859
Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 5:32 pm    Post subject: Well, I swear Reply with quote

Dear leeroy,
It's not the use of "swear words" I have a problem with - it's their overuse. True, the occasional F-word, in an appropriate context, can add intensity, but all too often the F-word (and others) are "done to death", employed so often (sometimes every third word or so) that they lose any force or special significance and become instead merely irritating or boring. I suspect that all too often this represents nothing more or less than an extreme vocabulary deficiency on the part of the swearer.
Regards,
John
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BethMac



Joined: 23 Dec 2003
Posts: 79

PostPosted: Wed Dec 31, 2003 5:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

leeroy wrote:
Swear words, functionally, usually express an extremity of some kind, a sort of intensity - they add a subjective slant to the speaker's message - attaching extra meaning often in the form of opinion or attitude towards (typically) the object. Consider the differences...

Where are you? / Where the f*ck are you?
What's that? / What the f*ck's that?

By ignoring these differences, you are depriving students of large chunks of functional English - and the cultural aspects that resonate underneath them.


I'm sorry, but I disagree. Swearing is "functional English"? I would argue that it is, in fact, disfunctional English. I find nothing more boorish than someone who cannot express him/herself without using a constant stream of cuss words. After a while, all you hear is the swearing and the meaning gets lost. I certainly don't want to listen to second language speakers trying to master the most distasteful elements of the language. It would be like listening to a 2-year-old cursing.

What's next? Teaching ESL students "Ebonics"? There's some "functional English" for them, innit leeroy? Wink
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