South Park is returning for its 26th season, and in 1999 the South Park movie is on top of the list of having the most swear words of any animated film.
In the Guinness World Records 2001, this film was said to have the most profanity used in an animated film. The book cited a total of 399 swear words, including 146 uses of the word "fuck," along with 199 offensive gestures and 221 acts of violence. When the children are in rehab a poster in the back of Mr.
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut hold the record for the most swear words in an animated feature film. The movie has an incredible 399 swear words, more than any other cartoon characters have ever spoken on the big screen.
“My research shows the British and Irish working-class introduced most of the swearing we have in Australia,” Krafzik says. “It was cemented in those early colonial days.” The British officer class tended to rotate in and out of the colonies. The working-class settlers – and convicts – stayed.
Bugger. (Noun/verb/adjective) A mild profanity that's also one of the most versatile words in Australian English. Exclamation; “Bugger! I dropped some more avo on myself.”
Reserved only for impact in the PG-13 universe, R-rated films have a green light to use the F-word unregulated. You only get one, and you better make it count. From action to comedy and everything in between, these PG-13 movies slipped in the F-bomb and made sure we didn't miss it.
In Sweden, bad words mostly have a religious origin and in the past it was common to amplify them with numbers, such as 'sjutton' (17), 'attans' (an old word for 18), and 'tusan' (meaning 1,000).
Kyle has tickets to The Lion King on Stage, but Cartman tells him that the HBC crime show Cop Drama is going to use the word "shit" uncensored.
Then in 1970, Robert Altman's comedy M*A*S*H became the first major studio film to use the f-word, a passing comment during a football scene. It was only a matter of time before cuss works became common in films...and more common in everyday language.
Rated an 'R' in the US and a '15' in the UK, South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut (US 1999), included 399 swear words during its running time, which despite labeled as 'uncut,' ran between 75 - 82 minutes depending on which country it was released in.
wtf [abbreviation]
vafan {interj.}
Fart, as it turns out, is one of the oldest rude words we have in the language: Its first record pops up in roughly 1250, meaning that if you were to travel 800 years back in time just to let one rip, everyone would at least be able to agree upon what that should be called.
If especially coarse words are used in a sexually charged way, the movie gets slapped with R rating, McMahon said. The word s--- can appear in a PG film, but only in a limited amount. Repeated use of the word b---- is acceptable in PG-13 movies.
Snippets of language that go "beyond polite conversation" are permitted in G-rated films, but no stronger words are present. Profanity may be present in PG rated films, and use of one of the harsher "sexually-derived words" as an expletive will initially incur at least a PG-13 rating.
R: Restricted - Under 17 requires accompanying parent or guardian. Children under 17 are not allowed to attend R-rated movies unless accompanied by a parent or legal guardian 25 years of age or older.
Bloody has always been a very common part of Australian speech and has not been considered profane there for some time. The word was dubbed "the Australian adjective" by The Bulletin on 18 August 1894.
17. Put a sock in it. Tells somebody to “shut up.”
Strewth/Struth
This one was originally a British contraction of the phrase "God's truth", but the Australian's have made it their own.