ChatterBank1 min ago
bloody
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I saw older answers on why bloody is a bad word in britian, and where it derived from. But I want to know how bad is it? Would you use it around your kids? Would a kid get in trouble for saying it around adults? Would you use it in "polite company?" Any examples would be helpful as I have been wondering about this for years.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In the scale of things, it is nowhere near the worst of impolite words, but is not really acceptable in polite company. Children in most families ae strongly discouraged from using it, and their parents would not use it around the children.
Historicaly it is said to refer either to menstrual functions (a disgusting thing to mention centuries ago) or the use of the Virgin Mary's name (a contraction of By Our Lady).
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I've noticed that Americans (in films at least) seem to think it's something the British say a lot. Fair enough, we probably do. However, this means that they have Ron in the Harry Potter films say it in every single film. This is quite believable if he were talking to Harry and Hermione (or his other contemporaries), but in one of the films he tells Professor McGonagall that her transformation was "bloody brilliant!". My kids laughed and laughed at this - mainly from the tingle of delicious horror that any child would EVER say this to a teacher!