Then you have a big hit Swedish movie two or so years ago: 'Fucking �m�l'. To Swedes, it is just one of those funny English words. �m�l is a town in Sweden, not a person... The BIG problem is that my daughter hears such English words on Swedish TV, where they are ok, and just uses them in English as well, not thinking anything about it. We have discussions...
On Fri, 22 Nov 2002 13:54:48+0800"m.w.chang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Speaking as a biology student, fuck is just a different way of saying > "place a penx into the vagxna". It's just a voice of difference. > > The main point is *NOT* whether the word is dirty. NO voice or word is > dirty. > > The problem the *FREQUENCY* of using those words. Do you always talk > about screwing others' mothers in your covnersation? That's really > impolite and taunting. Could bring about a small fight along country > borders. > > > Excuse me, but in the English I speak, fsck is very definitely a dirty > > word. Thankfully, we now have available to us XFS and Veritas, etc. If > > you think I'm joking, you haven't lost a passle of valuable files to > > lost+found or you'd know just how dirty the word fsck is. -- +============================+===============================+ | Roger Oberholtzer | E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | OPQ Systems AB | WWW: http://www.opq.se/ | | Erik Dahlbergsgatan 41-43 | Phone: Int + 46 8 314223 | | 115 32 Stockholm | Mobile: Int + 46 733 621657 | | Sweden | Fax: Int + 46 8 302602 | +============================+===============================+ _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc -> http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
