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Discussion » Questions » Family » Do you remember how your grandparents used to swear?

Do you remember how your grandparents used to swear?

'Dadgummit ,... Tarnation' etc.

Posted - January 22, 2021

Responses


  • 11113
    My Grandmother used to say - H -E - Double Hockey Sticks. Cheers and happy weekend! 
      January 22, 2021 4:19 PM MST
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  • 19937
    My paternal grandparents were old country European immigrants.  I don't think I ever heard either of them curse.  My maternal parents were first generation but I don't recall either of them cursing in front of us either.
      January 22, 2021 4:55 PM MST
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  • 13395
    My dad used to say 'dam bugger' often, mom would say 'oh shi-' sometimes.
      January 22, 2021 5:05 PM MST
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  • 44619
    Unfortunately, I never knew them. I bet my grandfather had some great Yiddish cuss words.
      January 22, 2021 7:22 PM MST
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  • 2128
    My mothers parents were pure as the driven snow lighthearted Irish. Too simple to swear. My fathers side was cops and the guy swore..GD it! How can anyone stick their jelly knife in a jar of peanut butter back at the ranch where he live with someone else. He built birdhouses while my father built stained glass windows. My mothers side father was one of the very first motorcycle riders with no kneecap to prove it and also a huge creative crystal radio making fan if not the first. My uncle was a musician who wrote White Christmas and the thief Irving Berlin stole it and then he went insane to prove it. One day with my mother present, he suddenly shout,  I wrote White Christmas and eventually locking him up in insane asylum. Fact! He attacked my mother at the kitchen table he went so cranky for life about Irving. This post was edited by CosmicWunderkind at January 23, 2021 8:44 AM MST
      January 22, 2021 7:27 PM MST
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  • 16791
    Pretty mild ones. Damn, blast and bugger was about it - at least when we kids were present. Even blind drunk (Dad's father had PTSD from World War II), he was careful to watch his language around children.
      January 22, 2021 8:59 PM MST
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  • 2128
    If anyone should have had PTSD over WWW2, it was my father because, he flew 95 combat missions over Guam and Japan as captain of a B-24. But he, rarely if ever swore Frank.On rethinking my post, I am adding 95 missions does seem like a lot but he was a dedicated military man and after WWW2 survival, he also went into The Korean War as a combat mission pilot and transported an atom bomb once as far as I know. This post was edited by CosmicWunderkind at January 23, 2021 11:22 AM MST
      January 23, 2021 2:06 AM MST
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  • 53509

     

      BACKGROUND
      I’ve only known my maternal grandparents; I do not know my biological father, so I have never even “had” that side of the family in my realm of consciousness. Additionally, my maternal grandparents broke up before my mother was ten years old. 
    My grandmother lived in my birth city, unlike my grandfather, who always lived in different states my entire life. She had always been a presence in my life from my first memories all the way into my late teens. I remember visiting my grandfather various times and in various cities.


      HE
      My grandfather was a Baptist preacher, I never heard him curse, nor even utter a word in anger. He was extremely devout, extremely straight-laced, and extremely even-keeled. If he ever cursed at any time in his life, I am not aware of it. No one I’ve ever talked with who also knew him has ever given me any inkling that he ever cursed. He was over 80 years old when he passed away last decade.

      SHE
      I was about 26 years old when my grandmother passed away. The closest I ever heard my grandmother use her version of profanity was referring to someone as a “so-and-so”, and she once referred to dog feces as “dukey”.  For that latter one, my cousins, my siblings and I were between four and ten years old when we heard her say it, and we all fell out laughing. 

      UPDATE
      It’s a coincidence that you posted this question, because just last week, I was talking with my mother, and she shared some family stories with me that I’ve never known about before. One involved when my mother was about 9 years old and my grandmother fixed her hair before going to school one morning. My mother went to a neighbor lady’s house after school, where she would wait until my grandmother got home from work. That day, the neighbor lady went visiting down the block and took my mother with her. At the house they visited was a woman who was a professional hairdresser. That woman took one look at my mother’s hair and insisted that it wasn’t done right. She took it upon herself to do my mother’s hair, changing it completely from the way my grandmother had done it.

      When the neighbor lady dropped my mother off at home, my grandmother, horrified, immediately asked who had changed her hair. My mother, an innocent and excited 9-year-old, happily chattered away about the nice lady who “was a professional” and “really knew what she was doing”.  My grandmother hit the roof, but not in any way toward my mother. It wasn’t until church let out the next Sunday that the meltdown took place. My grandmother, with my mother in tow, was waiting outside of the church after services when the hairdresser emerged. My grandmother cursed the woman out in front of all those church folks, the gist being, “I don’t care WHO you are or who you THINK you are, don’t you EVER touch my daughter’s hair again!”  There were choice curse words interspersed in the tirade, but telling it more than sixty years after the fact, all my mother remembered was the shock and amazement at hearing her mother say the word “ass”. For me, hearing it for the first time, I could barely believe my grandmother was ever like that. Strong emotions bring things out in people, right?



    ~

      January 22, 2021 10:25 PM MST
    3

  • 13395
    Very good, thanks.
      January 23, 2021 1:54 AM MST
    2

  • 53509
      January 23, 2021 6:57 PM MST
    1

  • 10052
    Wonderful story. Thanks for sharing. 
      January 23, 2021 9:49 AM MST
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  • 53509
      January 23, 2021 6:56 PM MST
    1

  • 5451
    If they got really upset they would invoke the name of Jeepers Cripe.  I think he was the son of Gosh.

    I’m probably going to get darned to heck now.


    This post was edited by Livvie at January 23, 2021 6:57 PM MST
      January 23, 2021 8:44 AM MST
    4

  • 10052
    LOL!!
      January 23, 2021 9:50 AM MST
    1

  • 10052
    Maternal grandparents didn't swear. My grandma could sigh like nobody's business, though. You could almost feel it. Hehe. 

    Paternal grandfather mostly avoided it around the grandchildren (mostly avoided the female grandchildren in general for the most part, haha), but I heard enough to know where my dad got his first lessons. Paternal grandmother would exclaim "Rats!" and that sort of thing. 


      January 23, 2021 10:00 AM MST
    2

  • 270
    My grandmother (on my mum's side) used to say "oh, stez!" which I believe was an East Yorkshire swear word.
      January 23, 2021 10:19 AM MST
    2

  • 13395
    Hello! Long time no see..
      January 23, 2021 10:37 AM MST
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  • 270
    I'm happy in my new strange world. Are you?
      January 23, 2021 10:59 AM MST
    2

  • 13395
    I am in a slightly different world but not really strange but I am fine anyway.
      January 23, 2021 11:10 AM MST
    2