
A Dictionary of Uncomfortable Words
What to Avoid Saying in Polite (or Any) Conversation
Cumberland House Publishing,US
Published on 14. October 2004
Book
Hardback
144 pages
978-1-58182-427-8 (ISBN)
Description
Realizing a dictionary was necessary to alert the public, they created The Dictionary of Uncomfortable Words. Each word is followed by a brief explanation of why it makes people uneasy when spoken, such as:
- Abhor: Looks innocuous enough on paper but utterly filthy when spoken aloud.
- Bull: In most circles, this word is merely a prefix. We prefer the term man-cow.""
- Congeal: Just because gooey becomes crusty doesn't mean we want to hear about it.
- Crotch: This word is disturbing even when referring to trees.
- Dingleberry: This is one fruit you don't want to eat.
- Half-cocked: Sounds like a circumcision that went too far.
- Horehound: A drunk with too much money in his pocket on Saturday night.""
- Abhor: Looks innocuous enough on paper but utterly filthy when spoken aloud.
- Bull: In most circles, this word is merely a prefix. We prefer the term man-cow.""
- Congeal: Just because gooey becomes crusty doesn't mean we want to hear about it.
- Crotch: This word is disturbing even when referring to trees.
- Dingleberry: This is one fruit you don't want to eat.
- Half-cocked: Sounds like a circumcision that went too far.
- Horehound: A drunk with too much money in his pocket on Saturday night.""
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Turner Publishing Company
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 209 mm
Width: 132 mm
Thickness: 12 mm
Weight
256 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-58182-427-8 (9781581824278)
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Schweitzer Classification