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If you ever wondered where cunt and fuck came from..

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 3:59 pm
by DRuM
.. there's some interesting history of swear words here.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A753527

" There is a legend that the old name for the crime of rape was 'Forced Unlawful Carnal Knowledge', and part of the punishment was that an abbreviation of the crime would be branded on the perpetrators head. Hence, people with 'F. U. C. K.' on their head were known to be rapists. A similar story is that during the time of the plague when it was necessary to increase the population a royal injunction was issued telling the common folk to 'Fornicate Under Command of the King."

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 4:00 pm
by Guest
We covered this last week

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 4:00 pm
by AmIdYfReAk
what is the background on "STFU"

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 4:03 pm
by Dave
Why did the censor it when they put a disclaimer at the top?

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 4:20 pm
by DRuM
Kracus wrote:We covered this last week
link?

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 4:27 pm
by Guest
Fuck I don't even remember the name of the thread. I was talking about exactly what you posted though and it was debunked. It's untrue as far as I'm aware about the King thing. I don't know about the other one where they stamp fuck on your head but it wouldn't surprise me if that was untrue too. I thought someone said it's origins were from some german word fliken or something like that.

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 5:13 pm
by DRuM
Kracus wrote:Fuck I don't even remember the name of the thread. I was talking about exactly what you posted though and it was debunked. It's untrue as far as I'm aware about the King thing. I don't know about the other one where they stamp fuck on your head but it wouldn't surprise me if that was untrue too. I thought someone said it's origins were from some german word fliken or something like that.

Yea it mentions that

"Eric Partridge, a famous etymologist, has suggested that the Old German 'ficken' or 'fucken', meaning 'to strike or penetrate', was related to the Latin words for pugilist, puncture, and prick, or to the Latin 'futuere' which had the slang meaning 'to copulate'. There are also clearer links to Dutch where 'fokken' means breed and is applied to cattle, and to a Swedish dialect word 'fokken' which has the English meaning. Certainly, all the earliest uses of the word in English came via Scotland, suggesting a Scandinavian origin4.

Records from as early as 1278 identify a man called John Le-Fucker (which, considering people often had names to do with their occupations, makes the mind boggle), and it was certainly in common usage by the 16th Century, appearing in a dictionary, John Florio's A World of Words, in 1598. By the 18th century, it had became a vulgar term; It was even banned from the Oxford English Dictionary."

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 5:19 pm
by bitWISE
DRuM wrote:
Kracus wrote:Fuck I don't even remember the name of the thread. I was talking about exactly what you posted though and it was debunked. It's untrue as far as I'm aware about the King thing. I don't know about the other one where they stamp fuck on your head but it wouldn't surprise me if that was untrue too. I thought someone said it's origins were from some german word fliken or something like that.

Yea it mentions that

"Eric Partridge, a famous etymologist, has suggested that the Old German 'ficken' or 'fucken', meaning 'to strike or penetrate', was related to the Latin words for pugilist, puncture, and prick, or to the Latin 'futuere' which had the slang meaning 'to copulate'. There are also clearer links to Dutch where 'fokken' means breed and is applied to cattle, and to a Swedish dialect word 'fokken' which has the English meaning. Certainly, all the earliest uses of the word in English came via Scotland, suggesting a Scandinavian origin4.

Records from as early as 1278 identify a man called John Le-Fucker (which, considering people often had names to do with their occupations, makes the mind boggle), and it was certainly in common usage by the 16th Century, appearing in a dictionary, John Florio's A World of Words, in 1598. By the 18th century, it had became a vulgar term; It was even banned from the Oxford English Dictionary."
I wonder if the Le-Fucker name is still being passed down.

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 7:18 pm
by seremtan
A stronger British term for testicles, which rhymes with 'frollocks'...
please :dork: why even bother if they're going to do that
...both Oxford and London boasted districts called 'Gropecunte Lane', in reference to the prostitutes that worked there...
:lol:

Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 8:00 pm
by Transient
...both Oxford and London boasted districts called 'Gropecunte Lane', in reference to the prostitutes that worked there...
:lol: