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S-word:
Or: brown-word , a euphemism for the word shit

Quote: Chip (Matthew Lillard) and his mother Beverly (Kathleen Turner) in Serial Mom (1994):
-- Chip: ' So happy I could shit .'
-- Beverly : ' Chip, you know how I hate the brown-word .'




See Also: beef bayo with extra mayo, Old Damocles, sword swallower, leaping over the sword, nap, big F, the, caso, futuere,

Quotes Containing S-word:
Charles Panati. Sexy Origins and Intimate Things (1998): ''Linguists are not certain why "bitch " passed from being a benign word, often an endearment, to a taboo. Some theorize that its explosive sound made it ideal for firing off as a slur. The psycholinguistics of all curse words require that they carry maximal energy on minimal sound, a spiked waveform characteristic of consonants. This gives the word energetic punch , making-it ''''explosive. The word "bitch " was first recorded as a verb, "to chronically complain about something", in 1823.''
Gay slogan: ''Homosexuality is not a four-letter-word .''
Anonymous: ''Love is a phwoarrr letter word.''
Gay slogan: ''Homosexuality is not a four-letter-word .''
Anonymous: 'Love is a phwoarrr letter word.'
Sir Percy Blakeney's (Richard E. Grant) pun on the word 'sentence' in the mini TV series The Scarlet Pimpernel (1998): 'Marriage isn't a word, it's a sentence.'
Lawrence Paros, The Erotic Tongue (1984): ''Sex comes from the Latin secare, "to cut or divide," and we first used the word to designate the two major categories of humanity we have come to know and love as male and female. We later used the word sex not only for dividing the sexes, but to refer to qualities of being male or female.'
A four-letter-word is a swear word of sexual or scatological nature. Examples: arse ; cock , crap , cunt , fart , fuck , piss , quim , shit , turd , twat . The excretory words, crap , shit and turd are sometimes referred to as the base trio.
Charlie Bales (Steve Martin) in the balcony scene with Roxanne Kowalski (Daryl Hannah) in Roxanne (1987): - Charlie : 'There's a tiny word. It's not a noun, it's not a verb, it's not an adjective. I don't know what it is, but if you said it to me tonight all the blackness would go away and you and I would be connected by a tunnel of light .' - Roxanne: 'What's the word, Chris?' - Charlie : 'Yes.'
''Sex is a three-letter word which needs some old-fashioned four-letter-words to convey its full meaning.'' From Murphy''s Laws on Sex.
Tony Morales (Dan Ferro) in Sgt. Bilko (1996): ''Can''t is a four letter word.''
Lawrence Paros, The Erotic Tongue (1984): ''Sex comes from the Latin secare, "to cut or divide," and we first used the word to designate the two major categories of humanity we have come to know and love as male and female. (...) We later used the word sex not only for dividing the sexes, but to refer to qualities of being male or female. Over time we assigned specific attributes to each category. These distinctions were dutifully recorded in the esteemed OED, making-it all very official. The male was described as "the better" and "the sterner" sex ; the female, as "the fairer," "the gentler," "the softer," and "the devout" sex . Women were also called "the second" sex . For a period of time between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when people spoke of "the sex ," they had women in mind.''
Joel Goodsen (Tom Cruise) in Risky Business (1983): ''It seems to me that if there were any logic to our language, trust would be a four-letter-word .''
Frank Harris (Brad Pitt) about Holly Wood (Kim Basinger) in Cool Word (1992): ''It''s Holly. I think she''s in-heat again.''
Grand Vizier Jaffar (Conrad Veidt) to Ahmad (John Huston) in The Thief of Bagdad (1940): ''There are but three things that men respect: the lash that descends, the yoke that breaks, and the sword that slays. By the power and terror of these you may conquer the earth.''
Grand Vizier Jaffar (Conrad Veidt) to Ahmad (John Huston) in The Thief of Bagdad (1940): ''There are but three things that men respect: the lash that descends, the yoke that breaks, and the sword that slays. By the power and terror of these you may conquer the earth.''
Allison Reynolds (Ally Sheedy) in The Breakfast Club (1985): ''It''s kind of a double-edged sword , isn''t it? (...) If you say you haven''t, you''re a prude. If you say you have, you''re a slut . It''s a trap . You want to but you can''t and when you do you wish you hadn''t.''
Allison Reynolds (Ally Sheedy) in The Breakfast Club (1985): ''It''s kind of a double-edged sword , isn''t it? If you say you haven''t, you''re a prude. If you say you have, you''re a slut . It''s a trap . You want to but you can''t and when you do you wish you hadn''t.''
Allison Reynolds (Ally Sheedy) in The Breakfast Club (1985): ''It''s kind of a double-edged sword , isn''t it? If you say you haven''t, you''re a prude. If you say you have, you''re a slut . It''s a trap . You want to but you can''t and when you do you wish you hadn''t.''
Allison Reynolds (Ally Sheedy) in The Breakfast Club (1985): ''It''s kind of a double-edged sword , isn''t it? (...) If you say you haven''t, you''re a prude. If you say you have, you''re a slut . It''s a trap . You want to but you can''t and when you do you wish you hadn''t.''
Allison Reynolds (Ally Sheedy) in The Breakfast Club (1985): ''It''s kind of a double-edged sword , isn''t it? (...) If you say you haven''t, you''re a prude. If you say you have, you''re a slut . It''s a trap . You want to but you can''t and when you do you wish you hadn''t.''
Sword-swallower Irmy (Mia Farrow), who just admitted having-sex with a student for $700, and (Max) Kleinman (Woody Allen) in Shadows and Fog (1992): - Irmy: 'I slept with one person for money . Does that makes me a whore?' - Kleinmann: 'No, only by the dictionary definition.'
Oscar Wilde: 'Yet each man kills the thing he loves / By each let this be heard / Some do-it with a bitter look / Some with a flattering word / The coward does it with a kiss / The brave man with a sword!'
Annie (Diane Keaton) and Alvy Singer (Woody Allen) in Annie Hall (1977): - Annie: 'Do you love me?' - Alvy: 'Love is too weak a word... I luuurv you. I lOOOve you. I luff you, two f's.'
The cynical Squire Jons (Gunnar Bjornstrand) to blacksmith Plog (Ake Fridell) who is looking for his unfaithfull wife in The Seventh Seal (1957): 'Haven't you learned by now that love is just another word for lust?'
The cynical Squire Jons (Gunnar Bjornstrand) to blacksmith Plog (Ake Fridell) who is looking for his unfaithfull wife in The Seventh Seal (1957): ''Haven''t you learned by now that love is just another word for lust?''
Lord Henry Wotton (George Sanders) in The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945): ''Always! That''s a dreadful word. Women are so fond-of using it , they spoil every romance by trying to make-it last forever. The only difference between a caprice and a lifetime passion is that the caprice lasts a little longer.''
Lawrence Paros, The Erotic Tongue (1984) about the word yard : ''By 1850 it had become obsolete. Yet the yard lives on in every man''s fantasy, though the details of the fantasy clash. We have the old adage, "Short and thick does the trick" (18thC), as well as Robert Burns''s "Nine inch will please a lady" while contemporary folk hyperbole immortalizes theman with a nine-inch pr**k and a twelve-inch tongue who can breathe through his ears. In our world , however, it''s the three-inch-fool (The Taming of the Shrew) who clearly is the rule.''
Lord Henry Wotton (George Sanders) in The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945):'Always! That's a dreadful word. Women are so fond-of using it , they spoil every romance by trying to make-it last forever. The only difference between a caprice and a lifetime passion is that the caprice lasts a little longer.'
Lord Henry Wotton (George Sanders) in The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945): ''Always! That''s a dreadful word. Women are so fond-of using it , they spoil every romance by trying to make-it last forever. The only difference between a caprice and a lifetime passion is that the caprice lasts a little longer.''
Daryl (Jack Nicholson) to Alex (Cher) in The Witches of Eastwick (1987): - Daryl: ''Interesting word ball room.'' - Alex: ''It''s always been one of my favorites.''
Daryl (Jack Nicholson) to Alex (Cher) in The Witches of Eastwick (1987): - Daryl: 'Interesting word ball room.' - Alex: 'It's always been one of my favorites.'
Ford Fairlane (Andrew Dice Clay) to the kid in The Adventures of Ford Fairlane (1990): ''Excuse me, did I hear the f-word out of you? You say ''fuck'' again and I''ll bang you right to fuck! Now get the fuck-out of here!?
Anita Miller (Zooey Deschanel), Elaine Miller (Frances McDormand) and William Miller (Patrick Fugit) in Almost Famous (2000): - Anita Miller: ''Feck you!'' (...) - Elaine Miller: ''Well there it is, your sister used the F- word.'' - William Miller: ''I think she said feck .'' - Elaine Miller: ''What''s the difference?'' - William Miller: ''The letter u.''
Lauren Bacall to her husband Jack Lemon in My Fellow Americans (1998): ''Don''t say frigging , Russ. If you have to use the F-word go-for the gold.''
Brick Pollit (Paul Newman) to his father Big Daddy (Burl Ives) in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958): ''You don''t know what love is. To you, it''s just another four-letter-word .''
Latrine (Tracey Ullman) to Prince John (Richard Lewis) in Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993). ''Put in a good word for me with the Sheriff of Rottingham. I''ve got the hots for him.''
Rebecca Trager Lott (Elizabeth Perkins), Alberta Russell (Kathleen Turner), Sylvie Morrow (Whoopi Goldberg), Alberta and Rebecca again in Moonlight and Valentino (1995): - Rebecca: 'I just realized that we have all kinds of womanhood here right now. We have a single-woman , a married-woman , a divorced woman and of course the ever present widow.' - Alberta: 'These are just words that describe your marital status, not womanhood . I don't think you ought to describe yourself in that-way , Rebecca.' - Sylvie: 'Why not?' - Alberta: 'Because it implies that we change ourselves around men. I mean, we are who we are irrespective of the company we keep.' - Rebecca: 'Hmm, hmm, which is why ever since some painter screamed for his idot dog with his stupid name we have been unable to utter one intelligent word.'


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Dictionary of Sexual Terms - 24150 terms and expressions, 3500 quotes, 47000 synonyms
Dictionary of the F-Word - 865 terms and expressions 200 quotes, 2200 synonyms
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