Brazil's use of the adjectival f-word is so impressive that it seems incredible that he was able to suppress it on air. |
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Whether viewed as a quick fix or a counterblast, the f-word is always fraught with danger. |
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Later he became the supreme 1960s dandy subversive, shocking the nation by being the first man to use the f-word on television. |
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In his response to a question about his favourite Tragically Hip lyrics, the lead singer used the f-word. |
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At one point during the segment, the skateboarder was heard using the f-word. |
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The lout was not swearing at the police but was using the f-word as an intensifier: there is an obvious difference of intent. |
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Being young and oh-so-clever, I thought it would be witty to close my oration with a quote that depended on the f-word. |
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Even in a meeting like this, where it's not so much the old fogies, the f-word is almost never used. |
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She also has a saucy example using the f-word to relate a grammatical nuance, and it's guaranteed to get most students to perk up mid-class. |
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Those three are the f-word referring to gay men, the c-word referring to a female body part, and of course, the n-word. |
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An early example of this was Bizarre, a show that seemed intent on shocking, not least by a liberal sprinkling of the f-word in its irreverent sketches and lampoons. |
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Sometimes an f-word or a b-word is used in TV and movies like a stutter. |
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With respect to the isolated use of the f-word derivative, the Panel concluded that, despite the program's 7:00 pm time slot, the word was acceptable in this unscripted context. |
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It came after Manic Street Preachers frontman James Dean Bradfield unleashed an f-word rant about greedy Irish bankers during the Welsh rockers' performance at Punchestown. |
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Two Adjudicators dissented from the majority's conclusion, noting that the f-word was uttered only once, in a live situation, and by a young player simply expressing his enthusiasm about his team's victory. |
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On her first episode live from New York, she accidentally said the f-word. |
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Needless to say, when my visit makes it on to the Tuesday late edition of the show, they have cut out the F-word. |
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You go walk in the city centre of York and hear couples with young children using the F-word. |
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I would like to see notices, or even laws, prohibiting the use of the F-word and other obscenities in all public places. |
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Teenage speech in Greenock includes the F-word as verb, adjective, adverb, or expletive in almost every sentence. |
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A TV reporter was canned by WCBS yesterday after he shouted the F-word at two meddlers who horned in on his live shot. |
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You'd be surprised what they can show as long as it doesn't include the F-word or boobies. |
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In order to refer to the activity denoted by the F-word, it is necessary to engage in circumlocution or periphrasis. |
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Controversy concerning social realities, both implicit and explicit in the F-word, may also account for getting a record number of people out to vote. |
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He is a likeable man, warm and friendly, talking at machine-gun pace, telling one story after another and finding ever more inventive uses for the F-word. |
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What set it off was the use of the F-word on prime-time television. |
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Hard-pressed teachers will have to keep a tally chart on the board showing how many times the F-word is used in class. |
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I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry DJ Chris Moyles after using the F-word live on air. |
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Whereas Gordon F-word Ramsay, right, is praised for his simplicity of description in recipe instructions that even a seven-year-old can follow. |
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Since, then I have become an aficionado of the publicly uttered F-word. |
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Tynan uttered the first F-word in British broadcasting history. |
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