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Deadwood to Add Black Characters Next Season
St. Peterburg Times ^
| June 27, 2004
| Eric Deggans
Posted on 06/29/2004 10:45:43 AM PDT by BluegrassScholar
click here to read article
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To: RoseofTexas
was the F word around during that time frame? I am pretty sure that nudity wasn't.
41
posted on
06/29/2004 12:32:59 PM PDT
by
BrooklynGOP
(www.logicandsanity.com)
To: BluegrassScholar
Yep. The Victorian syntax salted with the Anglo-Saxon profanity is a strangely addicting device. You almost have to visualize the spoken words as a written sentence to understand a lot of the humor, too. I laugh a lot more than my wife, because she can't build the sentences in her head. You really have to listen to the dialog.
EB Farnum: "An august commencement to my administration, waiting outside the door for a degenerate t!t-licker to pass."
42
posted on
06/29/2004 12:34:26 PM PDT
by
mumbo
(Rules are for people who don't like to make decisions)
To: RoseofTexas; bannie
From the
dictionary:
[Middle English, attested in pseudo-Latin fuccant, (they) fuck, deciphered from gxddbov.] Word History: The obscenity fuck is a very old word and has been considered shocking from the first, though it is seen in print much more often now than in the past. Its first known occurrence, in code because of its unacceptability, is in a poem composed in a mixture of Latin and English sometime before 1500. The poem, which satirizes the Carmelite friars of Cambridge, England, takes its title, Flen flyys, from the first words of its opening line, Flen, flyys, and freris, that is, fleas, flies, and friars. The line that contains fuck reads Non sunt in coeli, quia gxddbov xxkxzt pg ifmk. The Latin words Non sunt in coeli, quia, mean they [the friars] are not in heaven, since. The code gxddbov xxkxzt pg ifmk is easily broken by simply substituting the preceding letter in the alphabet, keeping in mind differences in the alphabet and in spelling between then and now: i was then used for both i and j; v was used for both u and v; and vv was used for w. This yields fvccant [a fake Latin form] vvivys of heli. The whole thus reads in translation: They are not in heaven because they fuck wives of Ely [a town near Cambridge].
43
posted on
06/29/2004 12:35:37 PM PDT
by
BrooklynGOP
(www.logicandsanity.com)
To: bannie
Looks like RoseofTexas was onto something after all.
44
posted on
06/29/2004 12:36:26 PM PDT
by
Old Professer
(Interests in common are commonly abused.)
To: Hildy
"I had a problem with the language the first time I saw it, but I kept watching it..."
therefore the overall morality of the nation drops another notch.
Incrementalism - WAKE UP! The proverbial frog in the pot of water - soon the nation will be dead.
45
posted on
06/29/2004 12:52:01 PM PDT
by
steplock
(http://www.gohotsprings.com)
To: Wally_Kalbacken
What about a fair representation of the contribution of the Vietnamese to the American West? Well, if we're talking about blacks, something like one third of all cowboys were black.
46
posted on
06/29/2004 12:55:35 PM PDT
by
Modernman
("I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members" -Groucho Marx)
47
posted on
06/29/2004 12:59:01 PM PDT
by
Non-Sequitur
(Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
To: All
48
posted on
06/29/2004 1:08:54 PM PDT
by
usadave
To: usadave
To: RoseofTexas
The 'F' word goes back to at least the 1500s in printed literature, but the history of it's origins are only legend. Shakespeare's contemporaries such as Ben Jonson used that word and much worse in their bawdy theatre plays.
The word itself must go back even earlier.
50
posted on
06/29/2004 3:50:20 PM PDT
by
The KG9 Kid
(Semper Fi)
To: Modernman
"something like one third of all cowboys were black"
This doesn't seem plausible. Do you have a source for this?
51
posted on
06/29/2004 4:16:31 PM PDT
by
Varda
To: The KG9 Kid; All
The origin of the "f" word does go to the Middle Dutch "fokken" to breed sheep.
As far as the "coarsening of the culture" is concerned, it's quite ridiculous. We are living in the shadows of residual Victorianism. Actually, under the interpretation of Victorianism. I am using the euphemism "f" word out of respect for my fellow FReepers not out of any problem I have using a word.
Profanity to me is Chris Lehane, the current incarnation of Virginia Hill (google just for kicks) not being slammed in the head with a baseball bat by any citizen of this great nation seeing that scumbag.
Michael Moore is profane. Barbara Streisand is profane.
Getting the picture?
52
posted on
06/29/2004 4:59:43 PM PDT
by
olde north church
(There is no honor in political correctness.)
To: Varda
53
posted on
06/29/2004 9:26:18 PM PDT
by
Modernman
("I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members" -Groucho Marx)
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