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List of swear words. Where did swear words come from and what does a strong word mean?

RUSSIAN MAT

Every person in Russia, from early childhood, begins to hear words that they call obscene, obscene, obscene. Even if a child grows up in a family where swear words are not used, he still hears it on the street, becomes interested in the meaning of these words, and pretty soon his peers explain the swear words and expressions to him. In Russia, attempts have been made repeatedly to combat the use of obscene words and fines have been introduced for swearing in public places, but to no avail. There is an opinion that swearing in Russia flourishes due to the low cultural level of the population, but I can name many names of highly cultured people of the past and present, who belonged and belong to the most highly intelligent and cultural elite and at the same time - great swearers in everyday life and not They avoid swearing in their works. I do not justify them and do not encourage everyone to use swear words. God forbid! I am categorically against swearing in public places, against the use of obscene words in works of art, and especially on television. However, swearing exists, lives and is not going to die, no matter how much we protest against its use. And there is no need to be hypocrites and close your eyes, we need to study this phenomenon both from the psychological side and from the point of view of linguistics.

I started collecting, studying and interpreting swear words as a student in the sixties. The defense of my Ph.D. thesis took place in such secrecy, as if it were about the latest nuclear research, and immediately after the defense, the dissertation was sent to special library depositories. Later, in the seventies, when I was preparing my doctoral dissertation, I needed to clarify some words, and I was unable to obtain my own dissertation from the Lenin Library without special permission from the authorities. This was the case quite recently, when, as in the famous joke, everyone pretended that they knew diamat, although no one knew it, but everyone knew mate, but they pretended that they did not know it.

Currently, every second writer uses obscene words in his works, we hear swear words from the television screen, but still for several years not a single publishing house to which I offered to publish a scientific explanatory dictionary of swear words decided to publish it. And only abridged and adapted for a wide range of readers, the dictionary saw the light of day.

To illustrate the words in this dictionary, I widely used folklore: obscene jokes, ditties that have long lived among the people, were often used, but were published in recent years, as well as quotes from the works of classics of Russian literature from Alexander Pushkin to Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Many quotes are taken from the poems of Sergei Yesenin, Alexander Galich, Alexander Tvardovsky, Vladimir Vysotsky and other poets. Of course, I could not do without the works of Ivan Barkov, without “Russian Treasured Tales” by A. I. Afanasyev, without folk obscene songs, poems and poems, without modern writers such as Yuz Aleshkovsky and Eduard Limonov. A treasure trove for researchers of Russian swearing is the cycle of hooligan novels by Pyotr Aleshkin, which are almost entirely written in obscene words. I could illustrate this dictionary only with quotations from his works.

The dictionary is intended for a wide range of readers: for those interested in swear words, for literary editors, for translators from Russian, etc.

In this dictionary, I did not indicate in what environment the word functions: whether it refers to criminal slang, youth slang or the slang of sexual minorities, because the boundaries between them are quite fluid. There are no words that are used in one environment. I also indicated only the obscene meaning of the word, leaving other, ordinary meanings outside of it.

And one last thing. You are holding in your hands the explanatory dictionary “Russian swearing”! Remember that it contains only swearing, obscene, obscene words. You won't meet anyone else!

Professor Tatyana Akhmetova.

From the book Great Soviet Encyclopedia (RU) by the author TSB

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From the book Russian Literature Today. New guide author Chuprinin Sergey Ivanovich

From the book Russian Mat [Explanatory Dictionary] author Russian folklore

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From the author's book

From the author's book

From the author's book

From the author's book

From the author's book

From the author's book

RUSSIAN HOUSE “A magazine for those who still love Russia.” Published monthly since 1997. Founder - Russian Culture Foundation with the support of the Moscow Patriarchate. Volume - 64 pages with illustrations. Circulation in 1998 - 30,000 copies. Takes a moderate nationalist position;

From the author's book

RUSSIAN MAT Every person in Russia from early childhood begins to hear words that they call obscene, obscene, obscene. Even if a child grows up in a family where they do not use swear words, he still hears it on the street, becomes interested in the meaning of these words and

From the author's book

From the author's book

7.8. Russian character Once a writer from Russia came to New York and participated in one of the many programs on local television. Of course, the presenter asked him about the mysterious Russian soul and Russian character. The writer illustrated this as follows:

Than from social status and age.

The widespread belief that teenagers swear many times more than mature people fails on Russian roads, in auto repair shops and undignified drinking establishments. Here people do not restrain impulses that come from the heart, splashing out a wave of their negativity on their interlocutor and those around them. In most cases, the use of swearing is due to a lack of vocabulary or the fact that a person is not able to express his words and thoughts in a more cultural form.

From the point of view of esotericism and religion, a scolding person decomposes himself from the inside and has a bad influence on the surrounding space, releasing negative energy. It is believed that these people get sick more often than those who keep their tongues clean.

Obscene language can be heard in completely different layers. Often in the media you can find reports about yet another scandal involving famous politicians or movie and show business stars who publicly used profanity. The paradox is that even those who use swear words to connect words in a sentence condemn this behavior of celebrities and consider it unacceptable.

The attitude of the law towards the use of profanity

The Code of Administrative Offenses clearly regulates the use of swear words and expressions in a public place. A violator of peace and order must pay a fine, and in some cases, a foul speaker may be subject to administrative arrest. However, in Russia and most CIS countries, this law is observed only when swear words were used by a law enforcement officer.
People use foul language regardless of profession, income and level of education. However, for many, the presence of elderly people, young children and work that requires polite communication with people is a deterrent.

Resourceful people found a way out of the situation a couple of decades ago: along with swearing, a surrogate appeared in oral speech. The words “damn”, “star”, “to get out” do not seem to be obscenities in the literal sense of the word and cannot fall under the corresponding article by definition, but they carry the same meaning and the same negative as their predecessors, and such words are constantly being replenished.

On forums and in news discussions, the use of strong words is usually prohibited, but surrogates successfully bypassed this barrier. Thanks to the emergence of an obscene surrogate, parents no longer hesitate to use it in the presence of children, harming the cultural development of their child, introducing the immature to the use of swear words.

Taboo vocabulary includes certain layers of vocabulary that are prohibited due to religious, mystical, political, moral and other reasons. What are the prerequisites for its occurrence?

Types of taboo vocabulary

Among the subtypes of taboo vocabulary, one can consider sacred taboos (on pronouncing the name of the creator in Judaism). The anathema to pronounce the name of the intended game during a hunt belongs to a mystical taboo layer. It is for this reason that the bear is called “master” in baiting, and the word “bear” itself is derived from the phrase “in charge of honey.”

Obscene vocabulary

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One of the most significant types of taboo vocabulary is obscene or obscene vocabulary, in common parlance – obscene language. From the history of the emergence of Russian obscene vocabulary, three main versions can be distinguished. Proponents of the first hypothesis argue that Russian swearing arose as a legacy of the Tatar-Mongol yoke. Which in itself is controversial, given that most obscene roots go back to Proto-Slavic origins. According to the second version, swear lexemes once had several lexical meanings, one of which over time replaced all the others and became attached to the word. The third theory states that swear words were once a significant component of occult rituals of the pre-Christian period.

Let's consider lexical metamorphoses using the example of the most iconic formulations. It is known that in ancient times, “poherit” meant “to cross out a cross.” Accordingly, the cross was called “dick”. The expression “fuck you all” was introduced into use by ardent supporters of paganism. Thus, they wished Christians to die on the cross by analogy with their own god. Needless to say, current users of the language use this word in a completely different context.

Swearing also played an important role in rites and rituals of pagan origin, usually associated with fertility. In addition, it should be noted that most conspiracies for death, illness, love spells, etc. abound in obscene lexemes.

It is known that many lexical units, now considered obscene, were not such until the 18th century. These were completely ordinary words that denoted parts (or features of the physiological structure) of the human body and more. Thus, the Proto-Slavic “jebti” originally meant “to hit, hit”, “huj” - “a needle of a coniferous tree, something sharp and prickly.” The word “pisda” was used to mean “urinary organ.” Let us remember that the verb “whore” once meant “to talk idle talk, to lie.” “Fornication” is “deviation from the established path”, as well as “illegal cohabitation”. Later both verbs merged into one.

It is believed that before the invasion of Napoleonic troops in 1812, swear words were not particularly in demand in society. However, as it turned out in the process, hazing was much more effective in the trenches. Since then, swearing has confidently taken root as the main form of communication among the troops. Over time, the officer stratum of society popularized obscene language to such an extent that it became urban slang.

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Sources:

  • how swearing (taboo vocabulary) appeared in 2019
  • Taboo words and euphemisms (profanity) in 2019
  • (OBVIOUS SPEECH AND OBVIOUS USE) in 2019

Modern dictionaries and reference books explain the term “expletive language” as a category of language related to obscene language. Often a parallel is drawn, or even a complete synonymization of the concepts of “abusive language” and “obscene”. It is assumed that swear words include only obscene, obscenely vile, vulgar words and expressions. And abusive language itself is regarded as a spontaneous reaction to certain events or sensations.

Instructions

According to the definition of swear words as part of obscene language, there is a certain thematic classification of swear words and expressions:
- emphasized negative characteristics of a person, including obscene definitions;
- names of taboo body parts;
- obscene names of sexual intercourse;
- names of physiological acts and the results of their administration.

Everything would be too simple and clear if not for one “but”. You don’t need to be a professional linguist not to trace the similarities in words and expressions: “abusive”, “self-assembly”, “battlefield”, “decoration”. Some linguists explain this similarity by its origin in the vocabulary of the predecessor of the Indo-European language. The lexical unit of the proto-language - “br”, could mean the common property of the tribe, food, and was the basis for the word formation of many terms from which the words “take”, “brushna”, as well as “bor”, “bee-keeper” were derived. It is assumed that the expression “abuse” could come from military spoils, and “battlefield” is a field of spoils. Hence the “self-assembled tablecloth” and, characteristically, “burden/pregnancy/pregnancy”, as well as agricultural terms - “harrow”, “furrow”.

Over time, words associated with the reproduction of offspring were grouped into the category of “swear words,” but they did not belong to obscenity vocabulary. Swear words were classified as taboo; only priests could use them and only in cases prescribed by custom, mainly in erotic rituals associated with agricultural magic. This guides the hypothesis about the origin of the word “mate” - agriculture - “swear words” - “mother - cheese”.

With the adoption of Christianity, the use of swear words was completely prohibited, but among the people, most words in this category were not positioned as offensive. Until the 18th century, modern swear words were used as an equal part of the Russian language.

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note

The list of swear words is not constant - some words go away or lose their negative connotation, such as the word “ud”, which is not perceived by contemporaries as anything other than the root of the word “fishing rod”, but in the 19th century was prohibited for use at the legislative level as a designation of male sexual organ.

The list of dirty words is quite wide. Surely you have had to catch such constructions in the speech of your interlocutor: “in general”, “as if”, “this”, “well”, “so to speak”, “this is the same”, “what’s his name”. The word Ok (“okay”), which came from the English language, has recently become very widespread among young people.

Weedy words are an indicator of general and speech culture

Among the verbal garbage there is also something that is considered indecent in any cultural society. We are talking about profanity. Elements of obscene language, without a doubt, indicate an extremely low level of general culture. Swearing carries a very strong expressive charge. In some cases, socially acceptable substitutes for obscene words are used, for example, “Christmas trees.” It is better to refrain from even such seemingly harmless expressions, even if the situation encourages an emotional reaction.

If you notice signs of dirty words in your speech, try to take control of them. Awareness of a speech deficiency is the first step towards eliminating it. Constantly monitoring the quality of your speech will help you express your thoughts more accurately and become a pleasant conversationalist.

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Related article

*Fool *
For a very long time, the word “fool” was not offensive. In documents of the XV-XVII centuries. This
the word occurs as a name. And these names are not slaves at all, but quite respectable people: “Prince Fyodor Semenovich Fool of Kemsky”, “Prince Ivan Ivanovich the Bearded Fool Zasekin”, “Moscow clerk (also a rather large position V.G.) Fool Mishurin”. Countless “stupid” surnames Durov, Durakov, Durnovo began from the same times. But the fact is that the word “fool” was often used as a second, non-church name. In the old days, it was popular to give a child a middle name in order to deceive evil spirits, they say, what can you take from a fool?

*Goon*
There is a theory that at first those who drank greedily and choked were called “rednecks.” One way or another, the first reliably known meaning of this word is “greedy, stingy.” And even now the expression “Don’t be mean!” means "Don't be greedy!"

*Infection*
Girls are different. Perhaps not everyone is offended by the word “infection,” but you certainly can’t call it a compliment. And yet, initially it was still a compliment. In the first half of the 18th century, secular suitors constantly “called” beautiful ladies “diseases.” And all because the word “infect” initially had not only a medical-infectious meaning, but was also synonymous with “kill.” In the Novgorod First Chronicle, under the year 1117 there is an entry: “One of the clerks was infected by thunder.” In general, it became so infected that I didn’t even have time to get sick. So the word "infection" became
to denote feminine charms with which they defeated (infected) men.

*Idiot *
The Greek word for "idiot" did not originally contain even a hint of mental illness. In Ancient Greece it meant “private person,” “separate, isolated person.” It is no secret that the ancient Greeks treated public life very responsibly and called themselves “polites”. Those who avoided participating in politics (for example, did not go to vote) were called “idiots” (that is, busy only with their own narrow personal interests). Naturally, conscious citizens did not respect “idiots,” and soon this word acquired new disparaging connotations of “limited, undeveloped, ignorant person.” And already among the Romans the Latin idiota means only “ignorant, ignorant,” from which it is two steps away from the meaning “stupid.”

*Cretin*
If we were transported somewhere five or six centuries ago to the mountainous region of the French Alps and addressed the local residents: “Hello, cretins!”, no one would throw you into the abyss for this.. Why be offended by the word in the local dialect? cretin is quite decent and is translated as “Christian” (from the distorted French chretien). This was until they began to notice that among the Alpine cretins there were often mentally retarded people with a characteristic goiter on the neck.. Later it turned out that in mountainous areas there is often a lack of iodine in the water, as a result of which the activity of the thyroid gland is disrupted, all the ensuing consequences. When doctors began to describe this disease, they decided not to invent anything new, and used the dialect word “cretin,” which was extremely rarely used. So the Alpine “Christians” became “feeble-minded”.

*Sucker*
This now very popular word “sucker” two centuries ago was used only by residents of the Russian north and they used it not to call people, but fish. Probably, many have heard how courageously and persistently the famous salmon (or, as it is also called, salmon) goes to its spawning site. Rising against the current, it overcomes even steep rocky rapids. It is clear that having reached and spawned, the fish loses its last strength (as they say, it “gets blown off”) and, wounded, is literally carried downstream. And there she is,
Naturally, cunning fishermen are waiting and take, as they say, with their bare hands. Gradually, this word passed from the popular language into the slang of itinerant merchants (hence, by the way, the expression “talking on a hairdryer,” that is, communicating in slang). “Sucker” they called a peasant peasant who came from the village to the city, and who was easy to deceive.

*Scoundrel*
The etymology of "scoundrel" goes back to the word "frozen". Cold, even for northern peoples, does not evoke any pleasant associations, so a cold, insensitive, indifferent, callous, inhumane, generally extremely (to the point of trembling!) unpleasant subject began to be called a “scoundrel.” The word "scum", by the way, comes from the same place. Just like the now popular “scumbags”.

*Mymra*
“Mymra” is a Komi-Permyak word and it is translated as “gloomy”. Once in Russian speech, it began to mean, first of all, an unsociable homebody (in Dahl’s dictionary it is written: “mymrit” - sitting at home all the time.”) Gradually, “mymra” began to be called simply an unsociable, boring, gray and gloomy person.

*Insolent*
The words “impudence”, “arrogant” existed for quite a long time in the Russian language in the meaning of “sudden, impetuous, explosive, passionate”. The concept of “brazen death” also existed in Ancient Rus', that is, death was not slow, natural, but sudden, violent. In the 11th century church work “The Menaions of the Four” there are the following lines: “The horses raced brazenly”, “I will drown the rivers brazenly” (brazenly, that is, quickly).

*Scoundrel*
The fact that this is a person unsuitable for something is, in general, understandable. But in the 19th century, when conscription was introduced in Russia, this word was not an insult. This was the name given to people unfit for military service. That is, if you didn’t serve in the army, that means you’re a scoundrel!

*Scoundrel*
But this word is Polish in origin and simply means “a simple, humble person.” Thus, the famous play by A. Ostrovsky, “Simplicity is Enough for Every Wise Man,” was performed in Polish theaters under the title “Notes of a Scoundrel.” Accordingly, all non-gentry belonged to the “vile people”.

*Bastard*
Another word that originally existed exclusively in the plural. It couldn’t have been otherwise, since “scum” was the name given to the remains of the liquid remaining at the bottom along with the sediment. And since all sorts of rabble often hung around the taverns and taverns, finishing off the muddy remains of alcohol after other visitors, the word “scum” soon passed into them. It is also possible that the expression “scum of society” played a significant role here, that is, degraded people who are “at the bottom.”

*Vulgar*
“Vulgarity” is an original Russian word, which is rooted in the verb “went”. Until the 17th century, it was used in a more than decent sense and meant everything that was familiar, traditional, done according to custom, that which HAS HAPPENED from time immemorial. However, at the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries, Peter’s reforms began, opening a window to Europe and the fight against all ancient “vulgar” customs. The word “vulgar” began to lose respect before our eyes and now increasingly meant “backward,” “hateful,” “uncultured,” “simple.”

*Bastard*
“Svolochati” in Old Russian is the same as “svolochat”. Therefore, bastard was originally called all kinds of garbage that was raked into a heap. This meaning (among others) was retained by Dahl: “Bastard is everything that is bastarded or dragged into one place: weeds, grass and roots, rubbish dragged by a harrow from arable land.” Over time, this word began to define ANY crowd gathered in one place. And only then they began to refer to all sorts of despicable people - drunks, thieves, tramps and other asocial elements.

*Bitch*
Anyone who opens Dahl’s dictionary can read that a bitch means “dead, scorched cattle,” that is, simply put, carrion, rotting meat. Soon, men began to contemptuously use the word “bitch” to call especially vile and harmful ones (“with a smell” ) whores. And since the harmfulness of a woman apparently turned men on (purely male pleasure from overcoming obstacles), the word “bitch,” while retaining a fair amount of negativity, appropriated to itself some of the features of the “femme fatale.” Although the vulture feeding on carrion still reminds us of its original meaning.

*Bastard*
The word “hybrid,” as we know, is non-Russian and entered the popular arsenal quite late. Much later than the hybrids themselves - crosses of different animal species. So people came up with the words “bastard” and “geek” for such crosses. The words did not stay long in the animal sphere and began to be used as a humiliating name for slaves and bastards, that is, “crosses” of nobles with commoners.

*Schmuck*
“Chmarit”, “chmorit”, according to Dahl, originally meant “to languish”, “to be in need”, “to vegetate”. Gradually, this verb gave birth to a noun, defining a pitiful person in a humiliated, oppressed state. In the prison world, prone to all kinds of secret codes, the word “ChMO” began to be considered as an abbreviation for the definition of “Moral Degenerate Person,” which, however, is completely not far from the original meaning.

*Shantrapa*
Not all the French made it to France. The Russian nobles brought many of them into captivity into their service. Of course, they were not suitable for the harvest, but as tutors, teachers and directors of serf theaters they came in handy. They examined the men sent to the casting and, if they did not see any talent in the applicant, they waved their hand and said “Chantra pas” (“not fit for singing”).

*Sharomizhnik*
1812 The previously invincible Napoleonic army, exhausted by the cold and partisans, retreated from Russia. The brave “conquerors of Europe” turned into frozen and hungry ragamuffins. Now they did not demand, but humbly asked the Russian peasants for something to eat, addressing them “cher ami” (“love friends”). The peasants, who are not strong in foreign languages, called the French beggars “charmers.” Not the least role in these metamorphoses was apparently played by the Russian words “sharit” and “moke.”

*Trash*
Since peasants were not always able to provide “humanitarian aid” to the former occupiers, they often included horse meat in their diet, including dead horse meat. In French, “horse” is cheval (hence, by the way, the well-known word “chevalier” - knight, horseman)... However, the Russians, who did not see any special chivalry in eating horses, dubbed the pathetic French with the word “trash”, in the sense of “rags”.

*Rogue*
Rogue, rogue - words that came into our speech from Germany. The German schelmen meant "swindler, deceiver." Most often, this was the name given to a fraudster posing as another person. In G. Heine's poem "Shelm von Berger" this role is played by the Bergen executioner, who came to a social masquerade pretending to be a noble person. The Duchess with whom he danced caught the deceiver by tearing off his mask.

Sent by Lev Utevsky