Who says the most swear words?

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.

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Who is the person who swears the most?

Martin Scorsese is to blame for this.

Hill took the top spot with 376 curse words, Leo got second with 361 and Jackson fell to third place for his performance in Quentin Tarantino's 'Jackie Brown'. In that film, he cursed a total of 301 times and remained at the top until 'The Wolf of Wall Street' premiered in 2013.

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Who has said the F-word the most?

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.

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What is the most said swear word?

A new survey shows that the "f-word," or as it's most commonly known, the "f-bomb," is used the most by Americans when it comes to cuss words, according to a new study by Wordtips, but there's other words that are used more others depending on where you live.

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Which people swear the most?

Croatia comes out on top, with over one hundred different explicit words and 5 million native speakers. Norway comes in at second place with 94 swear words for 5.6 million speakers, while their neighbours Sweden are also turning the air blue with their range of 120 explicit words.

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When Disney Accidentally Swears!

24 related questions found

Do Australians swear more?

Swearing: Swearing is more common in Australia than in many other cultures. Television programmes are less censored and mainstream society is largely desensitised to words that foreigners may find vulgar. It is normal to hear an Australian swear at some point during a conversation.

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Is Frickin a bad word?

“By the mid-20th century it's become a minced oath, so it's not considered offensive anymore, really,” says Bergen. Depending where you live, though, you might never hear “friggin'” from anyone except the Real Housewives. Where do people say “freakin'” compared with “friggin'”?

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What are swear words in Australia?

Exclamatory phrases
  • Bugger off/me. “Bugger” is common in both Aussie and British slang, and vaguely refers to someone or something that is annoying. ...
  • F*** me dead. ...
  • GFY. ...
  • Fair suck of the sav.

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How do you say the F word without swearing?

News Across the U.S.
  1. Balderdash!
  2. William Shatner!
  3. Corn Nuts!
  4. Dagnabbit!
  5. Son of a monkey!
  6. Barnacles!
  7. Holy cow!
  8. Poo on a stick!

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What is the longest swear ever?

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.

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Which actor swore the most?

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.

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What actor swore 23 times per 1,000 words?

According to the study, Hill says a curse word in “The Wolf of Wall Street” 22.9 times every 1,000 words.

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Who said I also cuss a little?

It's unproblematic queen Miranda Cosgrove, of course

The sound that's gone viral on TikTok is taken from Miranda Cosgrove's appearance on Whitney Cummings' Good For You podcast. Miranda appeared as a guest on episode 41 of the podcast way back in August 2020, so the sound took its time to go viral.

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Do males swear more?

Since orbital frontal cortex modulates anger generated by amygdala, these findings explain sex differences in emotional behavior, particularly aggression which is the underlying factor that causes males to use foul speech more than females.

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Who started swear words?

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.

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Who invented the first swear word?

The year 1310 would be a couple of centuries before a monk reportedly scrawled the word on a manuscript by Cicero, which has commonly been considered the first appearance of the F-word in English writings.

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Why do kids say the F word?

Swearing: why children do it

Young children often swear because they're exploring language. They might be testing a new word, perhaps to understand its meaning. Sometimes swearing happens accidentally when children are learning to say words. Children might also be trying to express a feeling like frustration.

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What do Australians use instead of swear words?

Australians also borrow replacement swear words from similar sounding words. Fudge and sugar are common replacements just as smarmy and sweet as the real thing. Get stuffed you galah.

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What was the first F word?

In 2015, Dr. Paul Booth argued he had found "(possibly) the earliest known use of the word 'fuck' that clearly has a sexual connotation": in English court records of 1310–11, a man local to Chester is referred to as "Roger Fuckebythenavele", probably a nickname.

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Why do Aussies cuss so much?

“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.

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How do Australians say no?

While some Australian speakers would pronounce “no” as a diphthong, starting on “oh” as in dog and ending on “oo” as in put, others begin with an unstressed “a” (the sound at the end of the word “sofa”), then move to the “oh” and then “oo”.

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What is the insulting name for Australian?

In 2002, Michelle Griffin discussed the fact that "bogan" is no longer just being used as an insult, but is in fact a way to identify with the "Aussie" culture that many Anglo‐Saxon Australian citizens are proud of. In the past, bogan was a term of disdain, but nowadays it has become "cool" to be a bogan.

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Is Bloody a bad word?

until quite recently bloody used as a swear word was regarded as unprintable, probably from the mistaken belief that it implied a blasphemous reference to the blood of Christ, or that the word was an alteration of “by Our Lady”; hence a widespread caution in using the term even in phrases, such as bloody battle, merely ...

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Do guys or girls swear more?

The Times reports researchers from Lancaster University and Cambridge University Press studied 36 volunteers by recording them for up to three hours of their daily lives and found that women were swearing more than men.

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Why are Aussies so popular?

American ranchers loved Australian Shepherds because they were great herders, but Aussies rose to fame among the general population because of their frequent appearances in rodeos. Not only could Aussies help herd the bulls, they could also perform tricks.

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