A Conversation for The Origins and Common Usage of British Swear-words

c***s in famous literature

Post 1

Uncle Heavy [sic]

duke of rochester wrote a poem whose title i forgot. its about eating and drinking. the final line is

'and then, to c*nt'

delightfully expressive

c*nt i believe appears somewhere in chaucer, at which point it isnt crude. so does arse, for that matter...


c***s in famous literature

Post 2

a girl called Ben

Ah, Rochester... Made Byron look like a goodie-two-shoes. (In answer to another question, yes, women obviously do go for bad guys, and not just Diedre Barlow, either. Though I NEVER saw the appeal of Mike Baldwin, myself).

I didn't know that Chaucer used the c-word. Wish I had. I would have liked to have included both those quotes in the entry, (or in the original entry, anyway).

B


c***s in famous literature

Post 3

Kerr_Avon - hunting stray apostrophes and gutting poorly parsed sentences

Chaucer used it in 'The Wife of Bath'- although as Chaucer is in old english, it's actually spelt 'quainte', or something along those lines.

smiley - ale


c***s in famous literature

Post 4

Mol - on the new tablet

Chaucer uses the word in The Miller's Tale, when the bawdy character whose name escapes me was chatting up Hemde Nicolas's wife and "grabbed her by the queynte". Our A level English class was mystified by this, and the teacher wasn't about to explain it to us, and the text notes described the word "queynte" as meaning "pudendum" - which didn't leave us much wiser.


c***s in famous literature

Post 5

a girl called Ben

"and the teacher wasn't about to explain it to us"

Funny that, eh?

Gotta love Chaucer, eh?

My aunt is the Wife of Bath, and my other aunt is Nanny Ogg... smiley - winkeye

B


c***s in famous literature

Post 6

Kerr_Avon - hunting stray apostrophes and gutting poorly parsed sentences

Our English master took great delight in explaining sexual references in our texts, in fact, sometimes I think he invented them, just so he could take about sex to 18 years and not get arrested...

smiley - ale


c***s in famous literature

Post 7

Uncle Heavy [sic]

ah yes. that staple of english teaching: the dodgy teacher who just loves to swear...


c***s in famous literature

Post 8

Kerr_Avon - hunting stray apostrophes and gutting poorly parsed sentences

Oh how we groaned when DH Lawerence appeared on the set text list.

smiley - ale


c***s in famous literature

Post 9

Dyddgu

The Chaucer queynte is a word I'm very fond of for this anatomical wossname, because it means "a lovely or a pleasing thing". Which is a lot nicer than the harsh swear word it has become - there is no greater insult than to call someone a c***, which is a shame, as I much prefer to think of that part of my anatomy as a pleasing and lovely thing smiley - winkeye

The same word gave us the modern "quaint", which we all use for to describe pretty cottages.


c***s in famous literature

Post 10

Kerr_Avon - hunting stray apostrophes and gutting poorly parsed sentences

Not quite so- It depends where you're from- I'd much rather be called a cxnt than a cow, for instance. It all depends on context and dielect.

smiley - ale


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