Lon
Well-known member
As you'd imagine, the majority on the planet, even among Christians: cuss and swear.
The long-standing position has been that cussing and swearing reveals a lack of vocabulary, lack of education, and "Poverty of Vocabulary."
Recent research shows that it 'may in fact, be the opposite.'
I sometimes shake my head at studies like this because it reminds me of the debate of whether Christians have lower IQ's than the rest of the world. It is all an attempt to use a sledge-hammer of statistics to beat the other side down and make ones' self feel good/superior perhaps.
In this study, I've a bit of doubt about any research done well, but it doesn't matter. For me it misses on several fronts:
Regardless if one 'knows' more vocabulary, it is absolutely true that if you use expletive, these are crutch/filler words (like "just, for sure, er, uhm, ah).
I do use filler words often to make a point, like 'ah.' "Ah' while for most a filler word, I use to convey a sarcastic 'I see" when another is belittling, being arrogantly pedantic, or just missing the mark and I'm about to correct them.
The point here is that swear words are actually not descriptive, but used to convey emotion rather than content. "<blank> you" doesn't mean anything. It is an attempt at a purposeful insult and an expression that "I am mad." Note on both accounts, there is indeed a demonstration of 'poverty of vocabular' regardless of how many words an individual knows. They are not using it: thus poverty is accurate and no study can even attempt to prove otherwise (which is why I laugh/shake my head). There is no 'study' that can disprove poverty of vocabulary unless they chase a strawman. I'm incredulous (shaking my head) or amused because these are college educated people, often professors, all of them swearing and cussing no doubt, trying to prop up their use of colorful metaphors instead of using their words in greater and expanding capability. :Z
Swearing/cussing does not show a low IQ or education, nor that such have lower vocabularies. It rather shows they 'use' those vocabularies less frequently at the time of swearing/cussing.
Colossians 3:8 Ephesians 4:29,30;5:4
The long-standing position has been that cussing and swearing reveals a lack of vocabulary, lack of education, and "Poverty of Vocabulary."
Recent research shows that it 'may in fact, be the opposite.'
I sometimes shake my head at studies like this because it reminds me of the debate of whether Christians have lower IQ's than the rest of the world. It is all an attempt to use a sledge-hammer of statistics to beat the other side down and make ones' self feel good/superior perhaps.
In this study, I've a bit of doubt about any research done well, but it doesn't matter. For me it misses on several fronts:
Regardless if one 'knows' more vocabulary, it is absolutely true that if you use expletive, these are crutch/filler words (like "just, for sure, er, uhm, ah).
I do use filler words often to make a point, like 'ah.' "Ah' while for most a filler word, I use to convey a sarcastic 'I see" when another is belittling, being arrogantly pedantic, or just missing the mark and I'm about to correct them.
The point here is that swear words are actually not descriptive, but used to convey emotion rather than content. "<blank> you" doesn't mean anything. It is an attempt at a purposeful insult and an expression that "I am mad." Note on both accounts, there is indeed a demonstration of 'poverty of vocabular' regardless of how many words an individual knows. They are not using it: thus poverty is accurate and no study can even attempt to prove otherwise (which is why I laugh/shake my head). There is no 'study' that can disprove poverty of vocabulary unless they chase a strawman. I'm incredulous (shaking my head) or amused because these are college educated people, often professors, all of them swearing and cussing no doubt, trying to prop up their use of colorful metaphors instead of using their words in greater and expanding capability. :Z
Swearing/cussing does not show a low IQ or education, nor that such have lower vocabularies. It rather shows they 'use' those vocabularies less frequently at the time of swearing/cussing.
Colossians 3:8 Ephesians 4:29,30;5:4