When host Jimmy Fallon told Jackson that Hill is first on the list, The Banker star replied: “That's some bulls***.” Hill has used a total of 376 curse words in film history, followed by Leonardo DiCaprio who has cursed 361 times. Jackson came in third with 301 curses used throughout his career.
It's Joe Pesci, who's said the F-word 272 times in his various movies. But check this out: 241 of those were from a single movie: “Casino”. Al Pacino is second, with 197, followed by Jason Mewes of Jay & Silent Bob fame and Jonah Hill with 183 apiece, Leonardo DiCaprio with 144, and Seth Rogen with 140.
It seems Samuel L.
The star recently discovered that Jonah Hill holds the record for most curse words said by an actor on film, and he was very surprised about it.
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.
Jonah Hill has been recognized for dropping the most curse words in film history, taking the top spot from Samuel L. Jackson. A new report by Buzz Bingo reveals that Hill has collectively uttered the most profanities in his film back-catalog, having cursed 376 times in total, and 22.9 times per 1,000 words uttered.
A new survey has named Tom Hardy as the most difficult actor for Americans to understand, forcing many to switch on subtitles. The survey by language app Preply, via The Wrap, also named gangster drama Peaky Blinders as the show Americans found the hardest to understand.
1965: First use of the f– word on TV is on 13 November 1965 by literary agent Kenneth Tynan (UK) during a satirical discussion show entitled BBC3.
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.
Record. The song once held a Guinness record for "Most swear words in a song" with 295 expletives. Psychostick currently now holds the record with their song N.S.F.W. with over 500 expletives.
A study from Buzz Bingo analyzed over 3,500 film scripts to discover which actors and actresses swear the most in their films. And believe it or not, Emily Blunt tops the rankings!
Amitabh Bachchan. His birth name is Inquilaab. He is the most popular actor in India.
The F-word was recorded in a dictionary in 1598 (John Florio's A Worlde of Wordes, London: Arnold Hatfield for Edw. Blount). It is remotely derived from the Latin futuere and Old German ficken/fucken meaning 'to strike or penetrate', which had the slang meaning to copulate.
There are exceptions, usually when the word is just repeated in a short time or used as part of an emotional scene, McMahon said. But any movie with more than three F-bombs likely couldn't remain PG-13, she said. And if the word is used to signify sex, the film automatically gets an R rating.
Reeves also made use of his one PG-13-permitted F-bomb in The Batman. But the F-word's use feels forced. When Batman arrives at a crime scene swarming with cops, the corrupt commissioner (who turns out to be the Riddler's next victim) scoffs, “This must be your favorite night of the year, huh, pal?
Dunbar is famed in Scottish and ecclesiastical history for issuing the longest curse, a 1000-word diatribe against the Borders reivers who he excommunicated saying this: “I curse their head and all the hairs of their head.
Cursing countries which swear the most - and the least
Coming out on top as the most likely to use explicit language online is France. The French have 7.59% - or seven in every 100 people - using curse words online per year.
(euphemistic) The word goddamn.
We don't know how the earliest speakers of English swore, because it wasn't written down. Before the 15th century – which is when swearing first appeared in writing – most writing was done by monks, and they were too good, and their work too important, for them to write down swear words.