The mechanics of swearing
by Mark on Aug.20, 2007, under Uncategorized
Howstuffworks People Channel has an article about How Swearing Works. It is an interesting read, particularly the part about how the brain stores swear words:
Many studies suggest that the brain processes swearing in the lower regions, along with emotion and instinct. Scientists theorize that instead of processing a swearword as a series of phonemes, or units of sound that must be combined to form a word, the brain stores swear words as whole units [ref]. So, the brain doesn’t need the left hemisphere’s help to process them.
Over the years, I have been able to craft rather complex swears. If I get into a swearing fit, I can just spit them out without much thought. I now know why I don’t really have to think about swearing when I do it; I used to think that perhaps I just swore too much.
I wonder what I would do when I first hear my children swear. I have often wondered about that. Would I scold them? Would making it taboo just make my children do it more? I think that at the very least I would teach my children how to use swear words properly. Swearing at inappropriate times is bad enough, but saying things that don’t make sense is worse to me. I guess I’ll just have to wait and see since kids are not on the horizon just yet.
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