Nikepallas
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:28 PM
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Hey anyone hear this story about the word --warning contains swear word. |
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Someone was telling me that they had read somewhere that the origins of Fuck came from Europe during the 16th or 17th century and that it actually came from a Proclamation. The war was causing a lot of death and to get a new generation going and making sure their was enough bodies to fight the Fornication Under Command of the King came into being and was often referred to as F.U.C.K.
I don't know if it is true but I thought I pass this on..
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Wat_Tyler
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:30 PM
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1. Nah - that's an old myth. |
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Fuck is a very old Anglo-Saxon / Germanic term.
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Nikepallas
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:33 PM
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2. Ahhh, thanks. so did it at one time mean something else and got |
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Edited on Sun Jan-16-05 06:34 PM by Nikepallas
perverted or did it always mean sex (in a sense)?
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ashmanonar
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Sun Jan-16-05 07:30 PM
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go on dictionary.com, and it gives a fairly accurate definition of it... but yes, it generally had a sexual connotation...(although, it doesn't even mean sex all the time in our usage...there's fuck up, fuck off, etc...it's an attention grabber, an eye-opener...)
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7th_Sephiroth
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:35 PM
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McKenzie
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:36 PM
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4. link about the term inside |
Nikepallas
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:44 PM
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5. Thanks for the info I'll tell my friend. |
ayeshahaqqiqa
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Sun Jan-16-05 06:45 PM
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6. that word comes from Dutch, I believe |
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at least that's what they said in "The Story of English". I've also heard that the word initially meant to plant seeds. When I taught upper elementary school, sometimes kids would use it for shock value. I'd say, "Oh, that word deals with gardening. Do you prefer to plant food or flowers?" Always deflated them.
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Barad Simith
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Sun Jan-16-05 07:57 PM
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8. origins, according to Merriam-Webster |
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akin to Dutch fokken to breed (cattle), Swedish dial. fokka to copulate (15th century)
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Thu Apr 25th 2024, 08:14 AM
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