Use+profane+language
41pro|fan´er — pro|fane «pruh FAYN», adjective, verb, faned, fan|ing. –adj. 1. with contempt or disregard for God or holy things: »a profane man using profane language. SYNONYM(S): irreverent, blasphemous. 2. not sacred; worldly: »profane literature …
42pro|fane´ness — pro|fane «pruh FAYN», adjective, verb, faned, fan|ing. –adj. 1. with contempt or disregard for God or holy things: »a profane man using profane language. SYNONYM(S): irreverent, blasphemous. 2. not sacred; worldly: »profane literature …
43pro|fane´ly — pro|fane «pruh FAYN», adjective, verb, faned, fan|ing. –adj. 1. with contempt or disregard for God or holy things: »a profane man using profane language. SYNONYM(S): irreverent, blasphemous. 2. not sacred; worldly: »profane literature …
44pro|fane — «pruh FAYN», adjective, verb, faned, fan|ing. –adj. 1. with contempt or disregard for God or holy things: »a profane man using profane language. SYNONYM(S): irreverent, blasphemous. 2. not sacred; worldly: »profane literature …
45pro|fan|i|ty — «pruh FAN uh tee», noun, plural ties. 1. the use of profane language; swearing: »Profanity is seldom pleasant to listen to. 2. the fact or quality of being profane; lack of reverence: »religious profanity. 3. profane conduct or language …
46Mary Whitehouse — For the British comedy show, see The Mary Whitehouse Experience. Mary Whitehouse, CBE (born Constance Mary Hutcheson, 13 June 1910 – 23 November 2001) was a British campaigner against the permissive society particularly as the media portrayed and …
47Menace II Society — Theatrical release poster Directed by Allen Hughes Albert Hughes Produced by …
48Novy Vzglyad — weekly Front page Type Weekly newspaper Format Broadsheet Owner Kirsan Ilyumzhinov …
49swear — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. i. affirm, depose, depone, vow; testify, witness; blaspheme, curse. See affirmation, imprecation. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To curse] Syn. blaspheme, utter profanity, cuss*; see curse 1 , 2 . 2. [To take …
50Pre-Code — films were created before the Motion Picture Production Code or Hays Code censorship guidelines took effect on 1 July 1934 in the United States. A previous code of conduct for the film industry, introduced in 1930, was widely ignored and not… …