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You are here:  Home / Top News / Teens and youngsters curse more than ever

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Teens and youngsters curse more than ever

Published: Feb. 25, 2008 at 10:20 PM
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SACRAMENTO, Feb. 25 (UPI) -- A leading scholar on cursing in the United States says adolescents and preteens are swearing in public to an unprecedented degree.

Timothy Jay says contemporary teens are more likely than those of previous generations to use curse words as fillers, McClatchy Newspapers reported.

Jay, who authored "Why We Curse" and "Cursing in America," estimates that the average adolescent uses roughly 80 to 90 swear words a day.

"Elementary school teachers report that children are using more offensive language at school than they have in the past," says Jay, who is compiling data for a study he will complete in the fall, examining preteens and swearing. "They have been breaking the rules at school more frequently in the last 10 years."

Jay, a psychology professor at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts in North Adams, Mass., has been studying swearing trends since the 1970s.

"Our language values are shifting, and it's just different, not better or worse," he said.


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