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How to write cleanly even if my character uses expletive language?


Using expletives in an essayHow to master literary American English as a second language?conversation language translationCan a foreign language novel have English character names?What font should I use to write alien language?How to write long extracts in a foreign language?What language should I write my programming blog post in?How to write dialogue for someone who is intelligent but barely speaks the language?How do I indicate that my character is speaking a different language than the one used for narration?How to interpret a language from a non-speaker's perspective?British / American language mishmash













3















I'm writing a story that I'd like younger readers to pick up. I and they know and understand that some situations are far better expressed with one f-word than a thousand milder ones. I'm keeping my narrative clean, but when I write the dialogue, I don't know what to do.



Should I:



  1. describe, as in:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. Charlie exploded with profanity that pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. or should I use made-up terms, such as frak from Battlestar Galactica:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "FRAK" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. also, I could use a milder word like crap, shoot, and the likes.


  2. Alternatively, I could replace with a place holder, as in:



Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "< EXPLETIVE >" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




Note
I've read answers like this one ("you have to eat before you [deficate]".) But that waters down the expression a lot for what I want.










share|improve this question









New contributor




mbadawi23 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 2





    Number one. Use your first choice.

    – DPT
    1 hour ago











  • In every situation? do you think I could work that in? The above is just an example. In fact, there is no door slamming in this story, yet.

    – mbadawi23
    1 hour ago











  • Write it, and keep looking around for additional ways to communicate it. "He yelled an expletive, and his mother said, "Grounded. no F-bombs under my roof." Keep at it. That's the nature of the game.

    – DPT
    57 mins ago















3















I'm writing a story that I'd like younger readers to pick up. I and they know and understand that some situations are far better expressed with one f-word than a thousand milder ones. I'm keeping my narrative clean, but when I write the dialogue, I don't know what to do.



Should I:



  1. describe, as in:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. Charlie exploded with profanity that pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. or should I use made-up terms, such as frak from Battlestar Galactica:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "FRAK" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. also, I could use a milder word like crap, shoot, and the likes.


  2. Alternatively, I could replace with a place holder, as in:



Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "< EXPLETIVE >" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




Note
I've read answers like this one ("you have to eat before you [deficate]".) But that waters down the expression a lot for what I want.










share|improve this question









New contributor




mbadawi23 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 2





    Number one. Use your first choice.

    – DPT
    1 hour ago











  • In every situation? do you think I could work that in? The above is just an example. In fact, there is no door slamming in this story, yet.

    – mbadawi23
    1 hour ago











  • Write it, and keep looking around for additional ways to communicate it. "He yelled an expletive, and his mother said, "Grounded. no F-bombs under my roof." Keep at it. That's the nature of the game.

    – DPT
    57 mins ago













3












3








3








I'm writing a story that I'd like younger readers to pick up. I and they know and understand that some situations are far better expressed with one f-word than a thousand milder ones. I'm keeping my narrative clean, but when I write the dialogue, I don't know what to do.



Should I:



  1. describe, as in:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. Charlie exploded with profanity that pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. or should I use made-up terms, such as frak from Battlestar Galactica:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "FRAK" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. also, I could use a milder word like crap, shoot, and the likes.


  2. Alternatively, I could replace with a place holder, as in:



Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "< EXPLETIVE >" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




Note
I've read answers like this one ("you have to eat before you [deficate]".) But that waters down the expression a lot for what I want.










share|improve this question









New contributor




mbadawi23 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I'm writing a story that I'd like younger readers to pick up. I and they know and understand that some situations are far better expressed with one f-word than a thousand milder ones. I'm keeping my narrative clean, but when I write the dialogue, I don't know what to do.



Should I:



  1. describe, as in:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. Charlie exploded with profanity that pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. or should I use made-up terms, such as frak from Battlestar Galactica:


Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "FRAK" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




  1. also, I could use a milder word like crap, shoot, and the likes.


  2. Alternatively, I could replace with a place holder, as in:



Tommy slammed the door on Charlie's fingers. "< EXPLETIVE >" Charlie exploded. The eruption pierced their mother's ears downstairs.




Note
I've read answers like this one ("you have to eat before you [deficate]".) But that waters down the expression a lot for what I want.







technique language profanity






share|improve this question









New contributor




mbadawi23 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




mbadawi23 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







mbadawi23













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asked 1 hour ago









mbadawi23mbadawi23

2967




2967




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New contributor





mbadawi23 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 2





    Number one. Use your first choice.

    – DPT
    1 hour ago











  • In every situation? do you think I could work that in? The above is just an example. In fact, there is no door slamming in this story, yet.

    – mbadawi23
    1 hour ago











  • Write it, and keep looking around for additional ways to communicate it. "He yelled an expletive, and his mother said, "Grounded. no F-bombs under my roof." Keep at it. That's the nature of the game.

    – DPT
    57 mins ago












  • 2





    Number one. Use your first choice.

    – DPT
    1 hour ago











  • In every situation? do you think I could work that in? The above is just an example. In fact, there is no door slamming in this story, yet.

    – mbadawi23
    1 hour ago











  • Write it, and keep looking around for additional ways to communicate it. "He yelled an expletive, and his mother said, "Grounded. no F-bombs under my roof." Keep at it. That's the nature of the game.

    – DPT
    57 mins ago







2




2





Number one. Use your first choice.

– DPT
1 hour ago





Number one. Use your first choice.

– DPT
1 hour ago













In every situation? do you think I could work that in? The above is just an example. In fact, there is no door slamming in this story, yet.

– mbadawi23
1 hour ago





In every situation? do you think I could work that in? The above is just an example. In fact, there is no door slamming in this story, yet.

– mbadawi23
1 hour ago













Write it, and keep looking around for additional ways to communicate it. "He yelled an expletive, and his mother said, "Grounded. no F-bombs under my roof." Keep at it. That's the nature of the game.

– DPT
57 mins ago





Write it, and keep looking around for additional ways to communicate it. "He yelled an expletive, and his mother said, "Grounded. no F-bombs under my roof." Keep at it. That's the nature of the game.

– DPT
57 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















7














Each usage has its place.



#1 is most commonly used in such situations. Even if you're not writing for children, you don't necessarily want every bit of cursing. Sometimes telling that the character used a strong word is enough, or even more effective, than actually spelling out what exactly he said.



#2 has place when you're writing for adults, who would know what you're hiding, but you still wish to keep a cleaner tongue. This solution only makes sense in speculative fiction - not in a story set in our here-and-now.



#3 might be in character for the person doing the cursing. Some people automatically resort to the milder words - that's how they've been raised, that's their natural vocabulary. If that is the case for the particular character, feel free to use it. Make sure it matches the rest of the characterisation though.



#4 if you use that, you are throwing the reader out of the immersion in your story. You are presenting the reader with a meta element - an in-story word has been visibly blacked-out outside. Terry Pratchett used this for comedic effect, with a hardened criminal who was literally saying '--ing' all the time. This is a tool you'd want to apply very carefully though, while being aware that you are throwing the reader out of the story - only do it if this is the deliberate effect you're seeking.






share|improve this answer






























    3














    Maybe you can use a spoonerism?



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoonerism



    However, I am not sure if there's any unintended effect it may have (it could make the excerpt unintentionally funny).



    For example:




    Instead of saying "F**k this!", your character could say: "Tuck
    fhis!".




    Check this example as a reference:




    Similarly to the above example, "Buck Fama" is a popular slogan in the
    (often contentious) rivalry between Louisiana State University and the
    University of Alabama (commonly shortened to Bama). This slogan can be
    heard very often from LSU fans.







    share|improve this answer






















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      7














      Each usage has its place.



      #1 is most commonly used in such situations. Even if you're not writing for children, you don't necessarily want every bit of cursing. Sometimes telling that the character used a strong word is enough, or even more effective, than actually spelling out what exactly he said.



      #2 has place when you're writing for adults, who would know what you're hiding, but you still wish to keep a cleaner tongue. This solution only makes sense in speculative fiction - not in a story set in our here-and-now.



      #3 might be in character for the person doing the cursing. Some people automatically resort to the milder words - that's how they've been raised, that's their natural vocabulary. If that is the case for the particular character, feel free to use it. Make sure it matches the rest of the characterisation though.



      #4 if you use that, you are throwing the reader out of the immersion in your story. You are presenting the reader with a meta element - an in-story word has been visibly blacked-out outside. Terry Pratchett used this for comedic effect, with a hardened criminal who was literally saying '--ing' all the time. This is a tool you'd want to apply very carefully though, while being aware that you are throwing the reader out of the story - only do it if this is the deliberate effect you're seeking.






      share|improve this answer



























        7














        Each usage has its place.



        #1 is most commonly used in such situations. Even if you're not writing for children, you don't necessarily want every bit of cursing. Sometimes telling that the character used a strong word is enough, or even more effective, than actually spelling out what exactly he said.



        #2 has place when you're writing for adults, who would know what you're hiding, but you still wish to keep a cleaner tongue. This solution only makes sense in speculative fiction - not in a story set in our here-and-now.



        #3 might be in character for the person doing the cursing. Some people automatically resort to the milder words - that's how they've been raised, that's their natural vocabulary. If that is the case for the particular character, feel free to use it. Make sure it matches the rest of the characterisation though.



        #4 if you use that, you are throwing the reader out of the immersion in your story. You are presenting the reader with a meta element - an in-story word has been visibly blacked-out outside. Terry Pratchett used this for comedic effect, with a hardened criminal who was literally saying '--ing' all the time. This is a tool you'd want to apply very carefully though, while being aware that you are throwing the reader out of the story - only do it if this is the deliberate effect you're seeking.






        share|improve this answer

























          7












          7








          7







          Each usage has its place.



          #1 is most commonly used in such situations. Even if you're not writing for children, you don't necessarily want every bit of cursing. Sometimes telling that the character used a strong word is enough, or even more effective, than actually spelling out what exactly he said.



          #2 has place when you're writing for adults, who would know what you're hiding, but you still wish to keep a cleaner tongue. This solution only makes sense in speculative fiction - not in a story set in our here-and-now.



          #3 might be in character for the person doing the cursing. Some people automatically resort to the milder words - that's how they've been raised, that's their natural vocabulary. If that is the case for the particular character, feel free to use it. Make sure it matches the rest of the characterisation though.



          #4 if you use that, you are throwing the reader out of the immersion in your story. You are presenting the reader with a meta element - an in-story word has been visibly blacked-out outside. Terry Pratchett used this for comedic effect, with a hardened criminal who was literally saying '--ing' all the time. This is a tool you'd want to apply very carefully though, while being aware that you are throwing the reader out of the story - only do it if this is the deliberate effect you're seeking.






          share|improve this answer













          Each usage has its place.



          #1 is most commonly used in such situations. Even if you're not writing for children, you don't necessarily want every bit of cursing. Sometimes telling that the character used a strong word is enough, or even more effective, than actually spelling out what exactly he said.



          #2 has place when you're writing for adults, who would know what you're hiding, but you still wish to keep a cleaner tongue. This solution only makes sense in speculative fiction - not in a story set in our here-and-now.



          #3 might be in character for the person doing the cursing. Some people automatically resort to the milder words - that's how they've been raised, that's their natural vocabulary. If that is the case for the particular character, feel free to use it. Make sure it matches the rest of the characterisation though.



          #4 if you use that, you are throwing the reader out of the immersion in your story. You are presenting the reader with a meta element - an in-story word has been visibly blacked-out outside. Terry Pratchett used this for comedic effect, with a hardened criminal who was literally saying '--ing' all the time. This is a tool you'd want to apply very carefully though, while being aware that you are throwing the reader out of the story - only do it if this is the deliberate effect you're seeking.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 1 hour ago









          GalastelGalastel

          35.9k6107191




          35.9k6107191





















              3














              Maybe you can use a spoonerism?



              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoonerism



              However, I am not sure if there's any unintended effect it may have (it could make the excerpt unintentionally funny).



              For example:




              Instead of saying "F**k this!", your character could say: "Tuck
              fhis!".




              Check this example as a reference:




              Similarly to the above example, "Buck Fama" is a popular slogan in the
              (often contentious) rivalry between Louisiana State University and the
              University of Alabama (commonly shortened to Bama). This slogan can be
              heard very often from LSU fans.







              share|improve this answer



























                3














                Maybe you can use a spoonerism?



                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoonerism



                However, I am not sure if there's any unintended effect it may have (it could make the excerpt unintentionally funny).



                For example:




                Instead of saying "F**k this!", your character could say: "Tuck
                fhis!".




                Check this example as a reference:




                Similarly to the above example, "Buck Fama" is a popular slogan in the
                (often contentious) rivalry between Louisiana State University and the
                University of Alabama (commonly shortened to Bama). This slogan can be
                heard very often from LSU fans.







                share|improve this answer

























                  3












                  3








                  3







                  Maybe you can use a spoonerism?



                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoonerism



                  However, I am not sure if there's any unintended effect it may have (it could make the excerpt unintentionally funny).



                  For example:




                  Instead of saying "F**k this!", your character could say: "Tuck
                  fhis!".




                  Check this example as a reference:




                  Similarly to the above example, "Buck Fama" is a popular slogan in the
                  (often contentious) rivalry between Louisiana State University and the
                  University of Alabama (commonly shortened to Bama). This slogan can be
                  heard very often from LSU fans.







                  share|improve this answer













                  Maybe you can use a spoonerism?



                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoonerism



                  However, I am not sure if there's any unintended effect it may have (it could make the excerpt unintentionally funny).



                  For example:




                  Instead of saying "F**k this!", your character could say: "Tuck
                  fhis!".




                  Check this example as a reference:




                  Similarly to the above example, "Buck Fama" is a popular slogan in the
                  (often contentious) rivalry between Louisiana State University and the
                  University of Alabama (commonly shortened to Bama). This slogan can be
                  heard very often from LSU fans.








                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 57 mins ago









                  repomonsterrepomonster

                  2,0841135




                  2,0841135




















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