So, this may seem very basic but I think there's some discussion that can come of it. Swearing has the following very basic and broad uses in language, according to wikipedia:
Most these definitions seem to suggest that expletives in general are not contributory to the strength or meaning of a sentence. To me, I feel they are ornamental and often unnecessary, though there are specific instances where they contribute to authenticity of a piece of writing, as in:
-colloquial dialogue
-colloquial internal first-person dialogue
However, there are instances, such as third-person omniscient narration with free indirect discourse, which uses expletives.
I wonder if the "cut unneeded adverbs/adjectives" rule can apply here, as sometimes expletives are used in these capacities, whereas there is perhaps a stronger word. Also, perhaps region and dialect can be expressed in stronger ways.
This is not a morality discussion, but simply I'd like to delve into the functionality of the expletive in the fictional narrative, or even a creative non-fiction narrative.
Are there sometimes stronger words to put in the place of an expletive, while still maintaining cultural authenticity?
Remember, this is not a moral debate, it is a syntactical one. I was just curious if there are syntactical studies out there, or if you all have opinions on the matter.
- Syntactic expletive, a word that performs a syntactic role but contributes nothing to meaning
- Expletive attributive, a word that contributes nothing to meaning but suggests the strength of feeling of the speaker
- Profanity, a show of disrespect, or a desecration or debasement of someone or something
Most these definitions seem to suggest that expletives in general are not contributory to the strength or meaning of a sentence. To me, I feel they are ornamental and often unnecessary, though there are specific instances where they contribute to authenticity of a piece of writing, as in:
-colloquial dialogue
-colloquial internal first-person dialogue
However, there are instances, such as third-person omniscient narration with free indirect discourse, which uses expletives.
I wonder if the "cut unneeded adverbs/adjectives" rule can apply here, as sometimes expletives are used in these capacities, whereas there is perhaps a stronger word. Also, perhaps region and dialect can be expressed in stronger ways.
This is not a morality discussion, but simply I'd like to delve into the functionality of the expletive in the fictional narrative, or even a creative non-fiction narrative.
Are there sometimes stronger words to put in the place of an expletive, while still maintaining cultural authenticity?
Remember, this is not a moral debate, it is a syntactical one. I was just curious if there are syntactical studies out there, or if you all have opinions on the matter.
