This paper investigates changes in swearing usage in informal speech using large-scale corpus data, comparing the occurrence and social distribution of swear words in two corpora of informal spoken British English: the demographically-sampled part of the Spoken British National Corpus 1994 (BNC1994) and the Spoken British National Corpus 2014 (BNC2014); the compilation of the latter has facilitated large-scale, diachronic analyses of authentic spoken data on a scale which has, until now, not been possible. A form and frequency analysis of a set of 16 ‘pure’ swear word lemma forms is presented. The findings reveal that swearing occurrence is significantly lower in the Spoken BNC2014 but still within a comparable range to previous studies. Fu...
This article describes the swearing practices of a group of young people aged 14–16 in the UK. The y...
An analysis of data collected from 2347 users of English on their self-reported swearing behaviour i...
This essay will investigate male and female usage of four swear words: hell, heck, damn and darn. A ...
This paper investigates changes in swearing usage in informal speech using large-scale corpus data, ...
Swearing is a part of everyday language use. To date it has been infrequently studied, though some r...
Swearing is a part of everyday language use. To date it has been infrequently studied, though some r...
Many linguists have analysed the usage of swear words from sociolinguistic aspects. Swear words appe...
This study analyzes the effect of sociolinguistic variables on the frequency of swear words in Irish...
This master thesis concerns change and attitudes to swearing among Englishmen. It includes two parts...
Starting from a data-driven approach, the current paper compares the BNC1994 spoken to the BNC2014. ...
Swearwords influence social evaluation of a speaker in a variety of ways depending on social context...
The methodology of the present study, designed for the purpose of collecting quantitative and qualit...
The methodology of the present study, designed for the purpose of collecting quantitative and qualit...
This paper reports on a study of phonologically related lexical pairs of the type fucking - flipping...
This thesis is about linguistic variation in swearing and its consequences for how speakers are soci...
This article describes the swearing practices of a group of young people aged 14–16 in the UK. The y...
An analysis of data collected from 2347 users of English on their self-reported swearing behaviour i...
This essay will investigate male and female usage of four swear words: hell, heck, damn and darn. A ...
This paper investigates changes in swearing usage in informal speech using large-scale corpus data, ...
Swearing is a part of everyday language use. To date it has been infrequently studied, though some r...
Swearing is a part of everyday language use. To date it has been infrequently studied, though some r...
Many linguists have analysed the usage of swear words from sociolinguistic aspects. Swear words appe...
This study analyzes the effect of sociolinguistic variables on the frequency of swear words in Irish...
This master thesis concerns change and attitudes to swearing among Englishmen. It includes two parts...
Starting from a data-driven approach, the current paper compares the BNC1994 spoken to the BNC2014. ...
Swearwords influence social evaluation of a speaker in a variety of ways depending on social context...
The methodology of the present study, designed for the purpose of collecting quantitative and qualit...
The methodology of the present study, designed for the purpose of collecting quantitative and qualit...
This paper reports on a study of phonologically related lexical pairs of the type fucking - flipping...
This thesis is about linguistic variation in swearing and its consequences for how speakers are soci...
This article describes the swearing practices of a group of young people aged 14–16 in the UK. The y...
An analysis of data collected from 2347 users of English on their self-reported swearing behaviour i...
This essay will investigate male and female usage of four swear words: hell, heck, damn and darn. A ...