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Good look at bad language, continued  

Dears,

I'm not surprised that a discussion of the F-word is a favorite topic of you all, when you're in the right frame of mind.

In response to Monday's column - Not to mention Hollywood movies - a good look at bad language, Peter Wang, a Chinese lawyer, writes:

"Enjoyed it. I wouldn't be surprised if the F-word were popular between Bush and his White House buddies, because that is what their politics is."

Thank you, Peter.

Lew Baxter, a senior journalist from Scotland, is a mentor to your columnist. He worked for Xinhua in the 1990s. He writes in from the UK:

"I agree that those who tend to articulate the best - usually - in a foreign language are those who have infiltrated and exploited the cultural depths of cussing."

You might like to know - although you might already know - that in Ireland the word 'feck' is bandied around endlessly as an expletive but it is also used extensively as a colorful emphasis for expressions, statements and comments.

"It is used freely by both genders and all ages and rarely incurs any social criticism. The Irish, you see, have cleverly adapted the word to suit and enhance their own linguistic agility."

For those of us with a more sensitive nature it can, though, be a tad disconcerting to hear young men and women peppering their conversations with 'feck this and feck that' but at the same time that simple switch of a vowel reduces the harshness and vulgarity of the original and endows it with a resonance that can be both amusing, in a slightly shocking way, and expressive.

"It is now an accepted speech pattern, although in other English speaking cultures can still cause a few shudders in the ranks of those whose ears are not attuned to this liberal use of the word."

Thank you, sir.

To illustrate Baxter's point, I've picked a few precious "fecking" jewels from Frank McCourt's crown copy of Angela's Ashes, A Memoir McCourt is Irish.

Angela's Ashes, I may add, is a favorite of the author of this column, and all for the right reasons. Here are a few selected passages from the book which won the 1996 Pulitzer Prize (All occurrences of the word in discussion are in bold type, context retained to assist comprehension):

------

You're lucky, missus, that you saw a bit of the world. Oh, God, I'd give anything to see New York, people dancing up and down Broadway without a care. No, I had to go and fall for a boozer with the charm, Peter Molloy, a champion pint drinker that had me up the pole and up the aisle when I was barely seventeen. I was ignorant, missus. We grew up ignorant in Limerick, so we did, knowing feck all about anything and signs on, we're mothers before we're women. And there's nothing here but rain and oul' biddies saying the rosary. I'd give me teeth to get out, go to America or even England itself. The champion pint drinker is always on the dole and sometimes he even drinks that and drives me so demented I wind up in the lunatic asylum.

------

I know it's my father because he's the only one in Limerick who sings that song from the North, Roddy McCorley goes to die on the bridge of Toome today. He comes round the corner at the top of the lane and starts Kevin Barry. He sings a verse, stops, holds on to a wall, cries over Kevin Barry. People stick their heads out windows and doors and tell him, For Jasus' sake, put a sock in it. Some of us have to get up in the morning for work. Go home and sing your feckin' patriotic songs.

------

He hobbles along the streets calling, Anna Lie Sweets Lie, which doesn't sound a bit like Limerick Leader and it doesn't matter because everyone knows this is Ab Sheehan that was dropped on his head. Here, Ab, give us a Leader, how's your poor leg, keep the change an' get yourself a fag for 'tis an awful feckin' night to be out sellin' the feckin' papers.

------

Frankie, Frankie, you're bringin' the cough on me. Will you dance for the love o' Jesus so I can remember me youth with your mother in the Wembley Hall. Take off the feckin' shoe, Frankie, an' dance.

------

Uncle Pa says on second thought the black dress could be the cassock of a Dominican priest and he goes down on his knees and says, Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. Aunt Aggie says, Get up, you oul' eejit, and stop makin' a feck of religion.

------

Paddy explodes. You're a feckin' chancer, Fintan. That's what you are, an' a feckin' begrudger too with your feckin' sangwidge an' your feckin' Sacred Heart of Jesus on the wall an' your feckin' holy water.

...

What has this column come to?

Dears, oh, dears.

 

 

About the author:
 

Zhang Xin is Trainer at chinadaily.com.cn. He has been with China Daily since 1988, when he graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University. Write him at: zhangxin@chinadaily.com.cn, or raise a question for future use in this column.

 

 
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