i fully believe kids should be allowed to swear with two main rules. 1-they can only use a word that they understand the meaning of (can’t let em sound dumb) 2-they are not allowed to swear at people (unless it’s fully deserved) i did a whole college unit project on this
Swearing is the real life equivalent of music in a musical- when a Feeling(TM) gets too big to say with normal words, you use a BAD WORD, a word of power, to show how big your Feeling is.
There is a rule at the treatment program I work at where clients can’t swear… I think that’s stupid, so I’ve always let them swear as long as they aren’t calling someone else something or saying a slur. Putting so much power on nonsense like swear words used as filler is a waste of time and energy.
Children swearing with the right context is the best thing you will ever see. Just like a 6 year old dropping a fat solid “fuck” when they drop their cup of juice? Nothing better
Children swearing is often fantastic to behold; my sister and I took our mother to Dublin for her 50th birthday a long while back, and as a) her Irish mother loved Guinness and b) her great-great grandmother had been the one to sell her family farm to the people who built the Guinness factory there, obviously we had to go on a tour of the (old) Guinness factory. Coming out a little tipsy, we found a group of maybe 9 year old children who were definitely drinking something they shouldn't have been, and one of them said "what the f*** are you looking at?", to which my mother (a teacher) said "Why, I was looking at you"; the child responded with what is still my favourite swear-chain, in a beautiful, clear Dublin accent: "Well... F*** off, you f***in strawberry-faced c***". (My mother nearly died laughing as we did indeed, at our own slightly wobbly pace, f*** off)
"Big Tugg, your videos feel like being trapped in a room with a thousand rubber ducks quacking the alphabet out of order while a mechanical clown tries to sell you insurance-chaotic, unsettling, and utterly unforgettable."
My dearly departed grandmother never cursed, except when she got really really mad and she would start shaking, and she would just say 'ᴅᴀᴍɴ' very quietly but angrily
not to mention so many cartoons had these episodes about swearing being treated as taboo when characters who are often small children overhear "bad words" from other characters and repeat those words which would often lead towards them getting scolded or punished by having to either sit in the corner or having their mouths washed out with soap and are later taught this "lesson" that they shouldn't swear without given a proper reason when the correct lesson is to when and how to use them properly
Weirdest thing about swearing to me is how the public finds it childish, yet if there's a show, game, or movie with swears it has a warning against showing it to kids. Well, which the hell is it, guys?
Back in high school, our english teacher use to call us pilchard. It's a type of fish but for some reason it was very insulting. It's like a fancy way of calling someone an idiot.
I tend to save swear words for things that I feel VERY STRONGLY about, so when I swear everyone who knows me well are like, "dang she really means that"
I’ve never sworn and don’t plan to. What I do is I save my anger when I feel very passionately about something so that person thinks the same thing you just mentioned.
I have a friend who only swears in extreme distress, so when we were getting our other friend ready for her wedding reception and we heard a button snap, her swift f bomb was very warranted.
The "C" word is my favorite word, and I'm American so it is a big no-no over here. I feel like it's a word you have to really mean, when you use it. In my 30 years of life I have used it twice, aimed at two different people. The most recent was about 8 years ago, and I stand by those feelings to this day.
Once I was in the car w/ my Mom, someone did something very uh, incorrect & jarring around us while driving. We said the exact same 2 swears, simultaneously, spaced apart. I was fully grown. That just shows how much I learn from her. It’s innate. I learned from the best:) It was really something. I’ll never 4get it. Never. I Love my Mom, so very very much indeed.
I would only tell my kids not to use swears at people but when talking kids releasing stress through healthy means has been proven to help create less physically violent people
When I was around 10, I was a very good kid that thought that cursing is a sin, imagine the absolute horror in my face when I came to school one day and my classmates (Mainly the guys) started yelling out curses to each other without any reason. I even had a friend who tried to get me to curse, I remember looking up at the sky and asking the heavens for permission. They didn't answer me of course but the topic completely left my mind once I stepped out of the school gates. Fast forward a couple of months, I heard my Dad yelling out curses since he plays video games in his spare time. I remember asking him why he was cursing and he just told me "As long as you don't say it to a person, I think of cursing as a way to express your emotions" I asked him if it was alright for me to do the same, and ever since then cursing has completely been drilled into my vocabulary. I curse so much that I really have to be careful with my words when I'm near small children
Something you missed with the word ass is that it also functions as a suffix for a lot of words to emphasis that adjective. Like "that's a cool-ass video topic!"
@Unqualified414 nahhhh, when the situation calls for it yet of all the adults you thought would say it you just hear the kid quietly say "well... shit"
My 2-year old grandson heard 'F*@K' somewhere and started repeating it quickly 'in series'. I thought it was hilarious, but of course, did not laugh for fear of encouraging him. Thank goodness we live in a multicultural country. When the day-care supervisor asked about it, my daughter explained he was trying to say 'forklift' ;-) Another fun fact... in the local language here, the word for 'excavator' sounds like 'bugger' in English - quite a taboo word for my generation when we were young. You could probably do a segment on how the sound of a words/name translates (e,g., Lisa in Spanish means flat. I've also been told that, in one of the Asian languages [I can't remember which] it means prostitute.
7:00: They do, many British people have accents which pronounce the "r", especially in Bristol. Pronouncing the "r" was also way more common before the 20th century.
2 things: You went up an extra swear at 14:50, and if you want to win an argument and completely baffle a person, instead of saying son of a b, say "son of a small child." Way more effective and it practically stun locks a person
I really appreciate the time and effort you put into researching the etymology of my favorite words in the English language! And the New/old swears you included at the end will make a nice addition to my collection. Thanks! 👍🏻
Well usually it comes from societal taboo. Sexuality is taboo, hence why so many words for genitals and sex are swears. In a society that was more open and relaxed about sex, these words wouldn't have the same power. Same goes for things like "goddamn", as society gets less religious, it loses its luster as a swear. But in more god-fearing societies, it retains its punch. So as society develops you see different swears rise and fall, based on what's currently considered valued and devalued in society.
@Silphanis short version, the prudes getting whiney is why. I hereby nominate all atheists should use biblical terms as swears in weird ways to confuse Christians. Not to be mean, but cause it'll be funnier than Mary.
I have been speacking french my entire life and this video made me realize that "con" had another meaning than "idiot". I have been using that word since the 5th grade.
As someone who will soon be teaching middle schoolers, (and has been substitute teaching for a few months already,) I so wish I could show this to the kids. They’re all obsessed with swears at that age and I just think it would be cool if I could show them the history and context of their favorite words while also giving them some fun new ones to toss around. I personally don’t care at all if the kids swear, but as a teacher I must unfortunately discourage this in class. This video would be super useful to show the difference between a swear and a slur, and I do crack down much harder on slurs than I do on swears for obvious reasons. Love the video, great work as always!
As someone whose parents were very strict about the language, 95% of the fun of using swear words comes from the fact that they are forbidden. Ironically the more it became socially acceptable for me to use those kind of words the less I actually used them
I was taught growing up that I was allowed to swear, and I was taught what they meant and how to spell them. The only rules were: I wasn’t allowed to swear AT people, and I wasn’t allowed to swear at school. Seemed legit.
I've always loved the game of sware sencoring. When I worked at Wendy's back in my highschool days, we'd all say "Son of a Baconator" or "Frosty Splitter". That last one has some connections to the Beard Splitter sware mentioned at the end.
About 25 years ago I worked for a company I despised. In the cubicle next to me was an Asian lady. When I left the company she thanked me, that sitting next me she had learned to curse properly in English!
I always thought that s*** was an acronym for 'Store High In Transit', a callback to when manure would be put on boats. If it was placed low, the methane gas would ignite with the lantern and blow the whole shebang sky-high. So they stamped the manure with the words "Store high in transit"
Linguist here. Acronyms were very rare before the 20th century. Anytime someone tells you an acronym origin for a word that's older than that, they're full of Store High In Transit.
Can we just take a minute to respect Tugg's editing and dedicated for that argument! Also, love learning that etymology is the Google rabbit hole that other people also fall down head first in. Love that I'm not the only one. As someone who has a list of old curse words from the 13th century thanks to my old high school English teacher. Who had us create are own creative story about the reason the family feud in Juliet and Romeo. They are the best 😂, much better the curse word we have now adays.
Kind of silly but thank you for not including slurs, and for being so inclusive. You're an amazing entertainer so don't be so hard on yourself. (The tism makes it hard to tell if its a joke or not :v)
As a French Canadian, my favourite insult that could be considered a mild swear it calling someone a "colon". While it also means the end of the digestive tract in French as well, it actually comes from "colonisateur/coloniaux" aka "coloniser". It was an insult because the people in France considered the ones living in colonies to be uneducated and backwards. It's like calling someone "trailer trash" or a "redneck" but with less classism.
"Anyway swearing is what we are talking about" *becomes a english teacher for a second* the book oxford dictionary of english 😭 "a word regarded as coarse blasphemous,or otherwise unacceptable in polite or formal speech." All you just read right there is to waste your time and to confuse you now watch the video instead of looking at comments😭
Actually ass (Arsch) is probably one of the most common insults German speakers use for each other. Its pretty tame compared to others which makes it mostly fine to say and it’s one that is a tiny bit more hard hitting when you’re a child so you learn it pretty early and then you just say it lmao. Asshole (Arschloch) is probably more common though.
even though swearing is becoming less and less stigmatized these days there's still so much moral panic surrounding it (especially with the whole "children are growing up too fast!" moral panic)
Had to watch this twice cause the first time i was just looking at the swear counter Ps. The "GO my children GO" is iconic😂😂 i can only imagine a flock of birds flying away from a phone
3:42 thing about this is that one those are the translated texts and either way two their meaning of “swearing” was really just talking bad about christianity. but christian’s took it as you can’t say fuck or you’ll go to hell
I remember in 6th grade, I said "ass" and felt so guilty I washed my own mouth out with soap and apologized profusely to my mom when I got home. ...for the word "ass." Which isn't even that offensive.
Tucker arguing with editor Tucker never fails to make me snort laugh like a nerd.
😂 same 🤝🏻
Impostor syndrome
Same hahaha
For me it was "Tell'd her a hunderd times nivver to put t'poaker i' t'ass-hoil."
@useth3forceforgood that cracked me the fuck up 😂. True comedy genius
if i have children they will learn how to use swear words correctly so they don’t seem stupid
I'd only teach them fancy/medieval English swears
If I had FUCKING children they will FUCKING learn how to FUCKING use FUCKING swear words FUCKING correctly so they don’t FUCKING sound FUCKING stupid
@@monculussmol I'll keep that in mind,thank you for the idea
@@monculussmollike I bite my thumb at thee?
That’s a good idea
Tucker, 2 min into the video, "I won't go into slurs".
Tucker after finding a slur for the Brits, " okay maybe this one time!!"
xDD It's different when they've ruled 75% of the world lol
Its the 4th of July, its fine for the entire week... those damn Biscuit Chuckers
A Scottish favourite is eejit
As a French canadian: swearing is an art form and it punctuates every sentence
Calisse putain tabarnak
j'comprend les 3 premier mais of the host?? i didnt quite get that one...
@@jayprick7544suremnt pour osti, mauvaise traduction probablement
esti c'est tu pas vrai ca
i fully believe kids should be allowed to swear with two main rules. 1-they can only use a word that they understand the meaning of (can’t let em sound dumb)
2-they are not allowed to swear at people (unless it’s fully deserved)
i did a whole college unit project on this
Swearing is the real life equivalent of music in a musical- when a Feeling(TM) gets too big to say with normal words, you use a BAD WORD, a word of power, to show how big your Feeling is.
I just think they shouldn't be allowed to at all no exceptions
@@handsomeorange198why though (own opinion not necessarily societal norm) just curious
There is a rule at the treatment program I work at where clients can’t swear… I think that’s stupid, so I’ve always let them swear as long as they aren’t calling someone else something or saying a slur. Putting so much power on nonsense like swear words used as filler is a waste of time and energy.
Children swearing with the right context is the best thing you will ever see. Just like a 6 year old dropping a fat solid “fuck” when they drop their cup of juice? Nothing better
My youngest sister (she's 7) once stubbed her toe and we heard a loud "SHIT!" It caught us so off guard that we chuckled before going to help her out.
@@Moho_braccatus_ you taught her well, congratulations
Me and my 4 y/o step brother were swordfighting, and I grabbed his sword and he yelled "oh shit" and ran lol
Children swearing is often fantastic to behold; my sister and I took our mother to Dublin for her 50th birthday a long while back, and as a) her Irish mother loved Guinness and b) her great-great grandmother had been the one to sell her family farm to the people who built the Guinness factory there, obviously we had to go on a tour of the (old) Guinness factory. Coming out a little tipsy, we found a group of maybe 9 year old children who were definitely drinking something they shouldn't have been, and one of them said "what the f*** are you looking at?", to which my mother (a teacher) said "Why, I was looking at you"; the child responded with what is still my favourite swear-chain, in a beautiful, clear Dublin accent: "Well... F*** off, you f***in strawberry-faced c***".
(My mother nearly died laughing as we did indeed, at our own slightly wobbly pace, f*** off)
My oldest was communication delayed, and when he at 3 years old went "aw shit" when he stubbed his toe. Nothing more amazing
If we were allowed use swear words as kids, they wouldn’t be fun to use as adults.
No they’re still fun, I was allowed, still swear :))
@@yourfriendlachdon’t encourage people to swear you asshole (get it 😉)
Actually the opposite. I sweared as a child because it would throw people off. Now i dont and it throws people off
If anything, swearing as a kid is even more fun because u kno ur gon get in shit for it if ur caught, so u always had to be smart with it
This is the same logic people use when they eat frozen yogurt instead of ice cream.
I love saying “assfuck” it’s the most “i just started swearing and I’m shoving words together” but I love it
switch it around to fuckass its got more bite that way 😂
or assclown
Dickweed is a fun one along those lines too
Hey, at least it makes sense.
Ok Castiel
"Big Tugg, your videos feel like being trapped in a room with a thousand rubber ducks quacking the alphabet out of order while a mechanical clown tries to sell you insurance-chaotic, unsettling, and utterly unforgettable."
Are you…speaking from experience?
SIR. ARE YOU OKAY.
r/Oddlyspecific
I highly appreciate the two colored map graphically presenting the northern and southern states, really cleared things up
My dearly departed grandmother never cursed, except when she got really really mad and she would start shaking, and she would just say 'ᴅᴀᴍɴ' very quietly but angrily
I think your grandma was an anime character
Did her husband get shot by a horrible burglar in 1958 and she said damn
@@DarkAuraLord pfffffffft
@@MeasuringRuler did she offer her grandson some hard candy?
Now it's time for the big question: is "small tugg" a slur?
No, a “small tugg” is what I do in the shower
@@x.SE7EN.x314😭
@@x.SE7EN.x314💀
@@x.SE7EN.x314same
"Small Tugg" Thems fighting words!!
The canonical evolutionary line for BiggTugg is Tuglet > Tugger > BiggTugg
Then eventually TuggDad then PapaTugg or GrampyTuggy.
Russell Crowe is the only Tugger I'll acknowledge, with his little tugboat
I think it’s more of a hierarchy system
He would be a normal type Pokémon wouldn't he
@@kyleeconrad daddy tug
I love how he subconsciously cursed in this video because it’s just part of is vocabulary yk 😭
This video showed me why Patrick called swears “sentence enhancers”
14:23 just skated right over the best old timey insult "mooncalf" which is basically calling someone a deformed abortion
WHAT ☠️☠️☠️
that is the best thing I’ve heard all day I’m totally using that
Jk Rowling used that
@@gustvangastel5481she didn't do her research for a lot of words lol that why she just used latin for spells lol
@@gustvangastel5481 they also used "jobberknoll", which I assume is derived from "jobbernowl"
Slurs and swears are completely separate categories imo
Depends. Sometimes it isnt, sometimes it is
And who you're talking to
One of em is fun, the other is derogatory. *OCCASIONALLY*
@theatricult yup. Just be respectful with those slurs tho girly 😭😭😭
@theatricult It’s fun to use slurs only if the slur describes you
Big daddy tugg is back
Hell yeah
Yep 😅
Chill
Yep😅
Yay
not to mention so many cartoons had these episodes about swearing being treated as taboo when characters who are often small children overhear "bad words" from other characters and repeat those words which would often lead towards them getting scolded or punished by having to either sit in the corner or having their mouths washed out with soap and are later taught this "lesson" that they shouldn't swear without given a proper reason when the correct lesson is to when and how to use them properly
Weirdest thing about swearing to me is how the public finds it childish, yet if there's a show, game, or movie with swears it has a warning against showing it to kids. Well, which the hell is it, guys?
One of my favorite old timey swear/slang terms is "bitch the pot" for pouring tea. So basically you can use it for "spilling tea"
Feeling "up to dick" means you arent sick
My niece is barely two and calls people "dumbass" in context when they've earned it lol
TUGGLETTS- ASSEMBLE!
Man the tuggboat!
YEAHHH 😼
WE HAVE ASSEMBLED
I don't wanna be a tugger 😢
I wanna be a tugglet! 😬
I’m a TUGGER
Back in high school, our english teacher use to call us pilchard. It's a type of fish but for some reason it was very insulting. It's like a fancy way of calling someone an idiot.
Hearing a bleep every 5 seconds during the second half of the video is priceless
I tend to save swear words for things that I feel VERY STRONGLY about, so when I swear everyone who knows me well are like, "dang she really means that"
I’ve never sworn and don’t plan to. What I do is I save my anger when I feel very passionately about something so that person thinks the same thing you just mentioned.
I have a friend who only swears in extreme distress, so when we were getting our other friend ready for her wedding reception and we heard a button snap, her swift f bomb was very warranted.
Same, but I still curse sometimes at home when I like trip over tons of stuff or hurt myself, but I don’t curse much when I’m with my friends
The "C" word is my favorite word, and I'm American so it is a big no-no over here. I feel like it's a word you have to really mean, when you use it. In my 30 years of life I have used it twice, aimed at two different people. The most recent was about 8 years ago, and I stand by those feelings to this day.
Lol, I use "fuck" with the frequency of a comma😂
I learned the word “shitass” from being in the car with my mom. But she full phrase was “goddamn shitass”.
I learned it from reservation dogs
I'm 😊😊num
Go******* sh*****
@@GamingGeeks4evaAUTTP Meteor Shit!
Once I was in the car w/ my Mom, someone did something very uh, incorrect & jarring around us while driving. We said the exact same 2 swears, simultaneously, spaced apart. I was fully grown. That just shows how much I learn from her. It’s innate. I learned from the best:)
It was really something. I’ll never 4get it. Never. I Love my Mom, so very very much indeed.
I would only tell my kids not to use swears at people but when talking kids releasing stress through healthy means has been proven to help create less physically violent people
Exactly what I told my kiddo. Let him learn time and place as well as context and social norm. Best he f up now then at 40 lol😂
When I was around 10, I was a very good kid that thought that cursing is a sin, imagine the absolute horror in my face when I came to school one day and my classmates (Mainly the guys) started yelling out curses to each other without any reason.
I even had a friend who tried to get me to curse, I remember looking up at the sky and asking the heavens for permission. They didn't answer me of course but the topic completely left my mind once I stepped out of the school gates.
Fast forward a couple of months, I heard my Dad yelling out curses since he plays video games in his spare time. I remember asking him why he was cursing and he just told me "As long as you don't say it to a person, I think of cursing as a way to express your emotions"
I asked him if it was alright for me to do the same, and ever since then cursing has completely been drilled into my vocabulary. I curse so much that I really have to be careful with my words when I'm near small children
I put Tugg on everytime I just need someone to yell at me about anything. Works great everytime
Something you missed with the word ass is that it also functions as a suffix for a lot of words to emphasis that adjective. Like "that's a cool-ass video topic!"
Personally, whenever a child swears i think its funny
Especially if their very young and don’t know what it means
@Unqualified414 nahhhh, when the situation calls for it yet of all the adults you thought would say it you just hear the kid quietly say "well... shit"
When I was a kid I hated swearing just because I knew it was kinda funny because I was so young. And I knew no one would take me seriously
My 2-year old grandson heard 'F*@K' somewhere and started repeating it quickly 'in series'. I thought it was hilarious, but of course, did not laugh for fear of encouraging him.
Thank goodness we live in a multicultural country. When the day-care supervisor asked about it, my daughter explained he was trying to say 'forklift' ;-)
Another fun fact... in the local language here, the word for 'excavator' sounds like 'bugger' in English - quite a taboo word for my generation when we were young. You could probably do a segment on how the sound of a words/name translates (e,g., Lisa in Spanish means flat. I've also been told that, in one of the Asian languages [I can't remember which] it means prostitute.
My family is very atheist so we can say swear words
Idk if anyone noticed but the swear counter completely fell apart after the 100th swear.
12:18 as an Australian, I would like to quote an Australian Comedian..
“When I say c_nt I don’t think of a ladies bits. I think of a golfer.”
7:00: They do, many British people have accents which pronounce the "r", especially in Bristol.
Pronouncing the "r" was also way more common before the 20th century.
2 things: You went up an extra swear at 14:50, and if you want to win an argument and completely baffle a person, instead of saying son of a b, say "son of a small child." Way more effective and it practically stun locks a person
The swear counter went back down after a little while
yea he swears again and it goes down instead of up at 15:25
@@nonexistentsquare2092so that shit balances out?
Why is big tugg teaching me more shit than school did
Potty word👿
No more saying cuss words guys! It is inappropriate and violent
Big dady
@@CornbreadFish
how is it violent? :
@@CornbreadFishIf you say a cuss word, you, you, you ,you... You go to jail and, and you don't wanna go to jail cuz i do not wanna go to jail
I really appreciate the time and effort you put into researching the etymology of my favorite words in the English language! And the New/old swears you included at the end will make a nice addition to my collection. Thanks! 👍🏻
13:56 Fun fact technically he did. He created the word nerd. Which still surprises me.
I love the fact that you're slipping in Clarksisms in your videos. "Cheese-eating surrendering monkeys" is such a cool insult from Jeremy.
I wasn’t even aware that term was from Jeremy Clarkson! That’s interesting
The way the counter turned red the second it turned 100 like Big Tugg just made a world record accomplishment by saying that many swears in one video
Then it went from 100 to 102 and I wanna a be the most annoying person ever
It turned green at 50 😂
He went from looking like he's going to cry to looking like hes angry
Turd in your teeth is infinitely more powerful than any swears I can think of.
literally..
A very eloquent way of saying "eat sh1t." I like it.
1:51 Back in 5th Grade, someone literally said "pissing him off" in the in-call messages in class. NO ONE CARED.
3:26 as a Canadian, I saw this written in graffiti on an upside down half burnt porta potty 🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣
i've always wondered this. who decided that they're bad. what. why can't i undecide that
As with most dumb rules made to impose upon others in life *The Church*
Well usually it comes from societal taboo. Sexuality is taboo, hence why so many words for genitals and sex are swears. In a society that was more open and relaxed about sex, these words wouldn't have the same power. Same goes for things like "goddamn", as society gets less religious, it loses its luster as a swear. But in more god-fearing societies, it retains its punch. So as society develops you see different swears rise and fall, based on what's currently considered valued and devalued in society.
@Silphanis short version, the prudes getting whiney is why. I hereby nominate all atheists should use biblical terms as swears in weird ways to confuse Christians. Not to be mean, but cause it'll be funnier than Mary.
@@hossdelgado626 REAL
@@Silphanis skibidi
0:15 wow, the pink monster is my favourite
nay its orange
@@biggtuggtuggers is kinda close dont you think?💀
@@biggtugg nay its... orange
@@biggtugg can you make a rocket league video?
i like the white ones, i'm a femboy
Bringing the editor argument back is the absolute best thing I could have hoped for and didn't expect to see. Made my day just with that bit alone.
11:18 oooh I’m def gonna use this 🙏🙏
Fr
As someone who lives in Quebec 3:24 keeps making me laugh
I live in Alberta and every time I watch this video that one bit makes me crack up too lol
Big Tugg be eating societal norms for breakfast
I have been speacking french my entire life and this video made me realize that "con" had another meaning than "idiot". I have been using that word since the 5th grade.
Father has posted again everyone,maybe he’ll let us out of the basement today
i really would love to see the sun
Was gonna rub out my beard splitter but then this dropped
12:05 my absolute favorite!! Mainly for the incredible SHOCK value 🤣
0:55 I legit dropped the f-bomb in front of my mom on the way to getting my driver's license 💀 In my defense, a bird had flown into the windshield
At least it wasn't a small child
@@Quick15did not expect this when i went to see the replies
@@capybara2244 Thats probably a good thing
@@capybara2244 I expected nothing less
As someone who will soon be teaching middle schoolers, (and has been substitute teaching for a few months already,) I so wish I could show this to the kids. They’re all obsessed with swears at that age and I just think it would be cool if I could show them the history and context of their favorite words while also giving them some fun new ones to toss around. I personally don’t care at all if the kids swear, but as a teacher I must unfortunately discourage this in class. This video would be super useful to show the difference between a swear and a slur, and I do crack down much harder on slurs than I do on swears for obvious reasons. Love the video, great work as always!
You could try to suggest replacing swear words with the more old timey versions, although i dont know how that would play out in the long run
@Gravity_Fans It would play out that Tommy would go home and tell his mom Ms. X said instead of using "fvck" use "xyz word". 😂
I mean, I'm absolutely going to start calling people 'beard-splitters' online. So you've helped me inspire joy into the world.
Fun fact: your pets will welcome slurs as long as you say them in a baby voice 🤗
As someone whose parents were very strict about the language, 95% of the fun of using swear words comes from the fact that they are forbidden. Ironically the more it became socially acceptable for me to use those kind of words the less I actually used them
I was taught growing up that I was allowed to swear, and I was taught what they meant and how to spell them. The only rules were: I wasn’t allowed to swear AT people, and I wasn’t allowed to swear at school. Seemed legit.
Tugg arguing with editor tugg never gets old💀
I've always loved the game of sware sencoring. When I worked at Wendy's back in my highschool days, we'd all say "Son of a Baconator" or "Frosty Splitter". That last one has some connections to the Beard Splitter sware mentioned at the end.
About 25 years ago I worked for a company I despised. In the cubicle next to me was an Asian lady. When I left the company she thanked me, that sitting next me she had learned to curse properly in English!
I feel swearing will become the only "brain rot" kids will accept that will be understandable to nearly every generation, and the most supported.
Im going to get a shirt with a picture of Tugg that says "This man ate my son"
if you do please make another for me to buy 😂
@@tonythetigersmuggler8770 is 20 bucks to much
can you make the tugginator
southerners seem to be swearing more but i do like the fact that we are still mor polite even in swearing
I’ve lived in Mississippi my whole life and and I’ve never had someone who isn’t a mom or grandmother be mad at cussing
I always thought that s*** was an acronym for 'Store High In Transit', a callback to when manure would be put on boats. If it was placed low, the methane gas would ignite with the lantern and blow the whole shebang sky-high. So they stamped the manure with the words "Store high in transit"
Linguist here. Acronyms were very rare before the 20th century. Anytime someone tells you an acronym origin for a word that's older than that, they're full of Store High In Transit.
Can we just take a minute to respect Tugg's editing and dedicated for that argument! Also, love learning that etymology is the Google rabbit hole that other people also fall down head first in. Love that I'm not the only one.
As someone who has a list of old curse words from the 13th century thanks to my old high school English teacher. Who had us create are own creative story about the reason the family feud in Juliet and Romeo. They are the best 😂, much better the curse word we have now adays.
13:07 papa tugg is gonna teach his tuggletts some swears 😂
Born a Tugglet, grew into a tugger 😊
Me and the homies be tugging fr we go way back❤
15:17 the counter went down one 💀
It went up two at 14:51
This video is the only way Tugg can use his communication degree for the rest of eternity
Im sure others have pointed this out, but "shit" isn't censored on tv anymore, and it isn't considered as bad as fuck anymore
You haven’t met a drunk Brit we can get out 80 swear words in one sentence
"I will not use slurs because it can upset a group of people"
"Those damn cheese-eating surrender monkeys!"
- Tugg
Key word: “people”
@@teathesilkwing7616safe edgy, very daring
Francophobes against Francophones Assemble!!!!
@@nerdygraves yessir mon chum
Kind of silly but thank you for not including slurs, and for being so inclusive. You're an amazing entertainer so don't be so hard on yourself. (The tism makes it hard to tell if its a joke or not :v)
TH-cam recommended that I watch next an entire 2.5 hour production of Hamlet. I think Tugg has made high art!
I love how you use images of politicians when talking about swears directed at people
One of my favourite use of swears is "F**k me sideways"
It just makes me think and wonder how someone would do that
Nothin’ like a Tugg on a Saturday afternoon.
Big tug back at it again teaching the kids new swears like a grandpa who served in world war II, but without the sl*rs.
The fact that Tugg invented a new swear word, tugger, for the sake of this video is dedication to the craft.
Bro how you teaching old swears without putting in the legendary “cöckwomble” of the british☠️
As a French Canadian, my favourite insult that could be considered a mild swear it calling someone a "colon". While it also means the end of the digestive tract in French as well, it actually comes from "colonisateur/coloniaux" aka "coloniser". It was an insult because the people in France considered the ones living in colonies to be uneducated and backwards. It's like calling someone "trailer trash" or a "redneck" but with less classism.
Tugglet > tugging (metamorphosis stage) > tugger
tuggernaut
"Anyway swearing is what we are talking about" *becomes a english teacher for a second* the book oxford dictionary of english 😭 "a word regarded as coarse blasphemous,or otherwise unacceptable in polite or formal speech." All you just read right there is to waste your time and to confuse you now watch the video instead of looking at comments😭
Jobbernowl is SO rude 😭😂 calling someone a cone head hits so much harder than the typical insult we use nowadays
k-k-konehead?????
I’m unsure about the US but in the UK the C word is the only swear that will immediately make a movie 18 rated, even if it’s used only once
I would love to see another video like this, just defining words we are all curious about and that is pretty commonly used
father tugg has returned with sustenance for the hungry children
Actually ass (Arsch) is probably one of the most common insults German speakers use for each other. Its pretty tame compared to others which makes it mostly fine to say and it’s one that is a tiny bit more hard hitting when you’re a child so you learn it pretty early and then you just say it lmao. Asshole (Arschloch) is probably more common though.
Tugg uploads bring me levels of joy like Saturday morning cartoons in the 90s.
even though swearing is becoming less and less stigmatized these days there's still so much moral panic surrounding it (especially with the whole "children are growing up too fast!" moral panic)
Swears are like Punctuation 2.0, its criminal that some people would find them bad taste.
In a video about swears he only was able to say about half as many swears in a south park episode
Had to watch this twice cause the first time i was just looking at the swear counter
Ps. The "GO my children GO" is iconic😂😂 i can only imagine a flock of birds flying away from a phone
I love the detail of turning 69 purple, very nice.
Its at 11:12
3:42 thing about this is that one those are the translated texts and either way two their meaning of “swearing” was really just talking bad about christianity. but christian’s took it as you can’t say fuck or you’ll go to hell
I remember in 6th grade, I said "ass" and felt so guilty I washed my own mouth out with soap and apologized profusely to my mom when I got home. ...for the word "ass." Which isn't even that offensive.