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Original Articles

Expletives: Men only?

Pages 156-169 | Published online: 02 Jun 2009

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (11)

Ariana N. Mohammadi. (2022) Swearing in a second language: the role of emotions and perceptions. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 43:7, pages 629-646.
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Evan K. Perrault, Jessie A. Barton, Grace M. Hildenbrand, Seth P. McCullock, Daeun G. Lee & Prince Adu Gyamfi. (2022) When Doctors Swear, Do Patients Care? Two Experiments Examining Physicians Cursing in the Presence of Patients. Health Communication 37:6, pages 739-747.
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Mark A. Generous, Seth S. Frei & Marian L. Houser. (2015) When an Instructor Swears in Class: Functions and Targets of Instructor Swearing from College Students’ Retrospective Accounts. Communication Reports 28:2, pages 128-140.
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SarahM. Coyne, Mark Callister, LauraA. Stockdale, DavidA. Nelson & BrianM. Wells. (2012) “A Helluva Read”: Profanity in Adolescent Literature. Mass Communication and Society 15:3, pages 360-383.
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BarryS. Sapolsky*DanielM. Shafer & BarbaraK. Kaye. (2010) Rating Offensive Words in Three Television Program Contexts. Mass Communication and Society 14:1, pages 45-70.
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Danette Ifert Johnson & Nicole Lewis. (2010) Perceptions of Swearing in the Work Setting: An Expectancy Violations Theory Perspective. Communication Reports 23:2, pages 106-118.
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DaleL. Cressman, Mark Callister, Tom Robinson & Chris Near. (2009) SWEARING IN THE CINEMA. Journal of Children and Media 3:2, pages 117-135.
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Barbara K. Kaye & Barry S. Sapolsky. (2004) Watch Your Mouth! An Analysis of Profanity Uttered by Children on Prime-Time Television. Mass Communication and Society 7:4, pages 429-452.
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Mari Boor Tonn & MarkS. Kuhn. (1993) Co‐constructed oratory: Speaker‐audience interaction in the labor union rhetoric of Mary Harris “mother” Jones. Text and Performance Quarterly 13:4, pages 313-330.
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Articles from other publishers (34)

Nick Wilson & Joshua Wedlock. (2023) Swearing as a Leadership Tool. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English English World-Wide / A Journal of Varieties of English English World-Wide 44:3, pages 323-350.
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Waqar Husain, Samia Wasif & Insha Fatima. (2023) Profanity as a Self-Defense Mechanism and an Outlet for Emotional Catharsis in Stress, Anxiety, and Depression. Depression Research and Treatment 2023, pages 1-10.
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Marta Dynel. (2023) Hashtag swearing: Pragmatic polysemy and polyfunctionality of #FuckPutin as solidary flaming. Journal of Pragmatics 209, pages 108-122.
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Miranda Ragland, Jennifer Harrell, Molly Ripper, Seth Pearson, Rachel Granberg & Robin Verble. (2023) Gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity and socioeconomic factors influence how wildland firefighters communicate their work experiences. Frontiers in Communication 8.
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Kristy Beers Fägersten & Karyn Stapleton. 2022. Handbook of Pragmatics. Handbook of Pragmatics 129 155 .
Enrique Gutiérrez Rubio. (2022) The profanity gap in contemporary Spanish society. Language and Dialogue 12:3, pages 407-423.
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Karyn. Stapleton, Kristy. Beers Fägersten, Richard. Stephens & Catherine. Loveday. (2022) The power of swearing: What we know and what we don’t. Lingua 277, pages 103406.
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Manuel Padilla Cruz. (2021) On the interpretation of utterances with expressive expletives. Pragmatics & Cognition Pragmatics and Cognition 28:2, pages 252-276.
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Kristy Beers Fägersten & Gerardine M. Pereira. (2021) Swear words for sale. Pragmatics and Society 12:1, pages 79-105.
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Manuel Padilla Cruz. (2019) Qualifying insults, offensive epithets, slurs and expressive expletives. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 7:2, pages 156-181.
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Rajshakhar Paul, Amiangshu Bosu & Kazi Zakia Sultana. (2019) Expressions of Sentiments during Code Reviews: Male vs. Female. Expressions of Sentiments during Code Reviews: Male vs. Female.
Dariusz Jemielniak, Aleksandra Przegalińska & Agata Stasik. (2018) Anecdotal evidence: understanding organizational reality through organizational humorous tales. HUMOR 31:3, pages 539-561.
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Christina L. Patton, Michael Asken, William J. Fremouw & Robert Bemis. (2017) The Influence of Police Profanity on Public Perception of Excessive Force. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 32:4, pages 340-357.
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Minna Hjort. 2017. Advances in Swearing Research. Advances in Swearing Research 231 256 .
Hansika Kapoor. (2014) Swears in Context: The Difference Between Casual and Abusive Swearing. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 45:2, pages 259-274.
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Ada Ya-ying Yang & Shelley Ching-yu Depner. 2016. Embodiment in Language (II). Embodiment in Language (II) 93 108 .
Ada Ya-ying Yang & Shelley Ching-yu Depner. 2016. Embodiment in Language (II). Embodiment in Language (II) 75 92 .
Emre Güvendir. (2015) Why are males inclined to use strong swear words more than females? An evolutionary explanation based on male intergroup aggressiveness. Language Sciences 50, pages 133-139.
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Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 201 218 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 173 200 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 155 171 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 125 154 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 95 123 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 67 91 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 37 66 .
Ralina L. Joseph. 2012. Transcending Blackness. Transcending Blackness 1 34 .
Diomidis Stamatis. 2011. 10 Essentials for High Performance Quality in the 21st Century. 10 Essentials for High Performance Quality in the 21st Century 207 244 .
Bróna Murphy. (2009) ‘She's a fucking ticket’: the pragmatics of fuck in Irish English – an age and gender perspective . Corpora 4:1, pages 85-106.
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Fiona Farr & Bróna Murphy. (2009) Religious references in contemporary Irish English: ‘for the love of God almighty. . . . I'm a holy terror for turf’. Intercultural Pragmatics 6:4.
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Yehuda Baruch & Stuart Jenkins. (2007) Swearing at work and permissive leadership culture. Leadership & Organization Development Journal 28:6, pages 492-507.
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Eric Rassin & Peter Muris. (2005) Why do women swear? An exploration of reasons for and perceived efficacy of swearing in Dutch female students. Personality and Individual Differences 38:7, pages 1669-1674.
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D Van Lancker & J.L Cummings. (1999) Expletives: neurolinguistic and neurobehavioral perspectives on swearing. Brain Research Reviews 31:1, pages 83-104.
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Richard H. Haswell & Janis Tedesco Haswell. (1996) Gender bias and critique of student writing. Assessing Writing 3:1, pages 31-83.
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Vivian De Klerk. (2008) How taboo are taboo words for girls?. Language in Society 21:2, pages 277-289.
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