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61 Sentences With "used profanity"

How to use used profanity in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "used profanity" and check conjugation/comparative form for "used profanity". Mastering all the usages of "used profanity" from sentence examples published by news publications.

According to Stark, the discussion grew heated and he used profanity.
At that time, Derulo claims, the pilot used profanity and ordered them off the plane.
Mims, who did not give his first name, said the women used profanity and threats.
After the game, Lowry told reporters that the man used profanity toward him as well.
Samantha Bee, Robert De Niro and Kathy Griffin have famously used profanity to attack President Trump.
Fox used profanity last February when insisting Mexico would never pay for Trump's proposed border structure.
It said Mr. Oliver was angry he had to be there and used profanity during his testimony.
Lewandowski denied shouting at lawmakers, telling CNN he only used profanity after Democrats first cursed at him.
Once again, Robert De Niro got in front of a crowd and used profanity while referring to President Trump.
Pirone then saw Grant walking between the train cars and used profanity to order him to get off the train.
" Fox on Thursday used profanity while blasting Trump's proposed barrier, adding that the real estate tycoon is "crazy" and "egocentric.
At a fiscal-court meeting on January 22017, Hunt stood up, used profanity, and shook a finger in the board's direction.
At a rally in 2017, he used profanity in urging team owners to fire players who take a knee during the anthem.
The officer pointed his gun at them, used profanity, and threatened to put their heads through a wall and to blow up their homes.
Saraland police also released surveillance footage from inside the restaurant, as well as quotes from witnesses, who they claim said Clemons used profanity and made threats.
Federal legislators are more likely to have used profanity online, with 34% of senators or House members using it, compared with 16% of state lawmakers. Sen.
"The officer pointed his gun at them, used profanity, and threatened to put their heads through a wall and to blow up their homes," the report says.
Among other things, the algorithm tagged posts as offensive when they used profanity, compared someone to Hitler or a pedophile, engaged in name calling, and so on.
"Trump used profanity three times in his speech, and look I'm not an old fuddy duddy, but this should at least be G ... rated," Bush said last week in Laconia, New Hampshire.
Kelly then told Scaramucci he made the decision because he felt Scaramucci would "never recover" from his interview with the New Yorker, in which he used profanity to describe several members of the Trump administration.
During the proceedings, Mr. Levin pressed Mr. Sparks on why a Goldman colleague had used profanity in an email describing the quality of one such mortgage security that the firm was selling to institutional investors.
But several students complained that she had an abrasive and disparaging style, used profanity and sexual slang in the classroom, and made off-color jokes — one, about how quality of sex gets worse the longer the relationship.
"Police were standing there to make sure everyone paid, which we felt was racial profiling," Spencer told the news outlet, adding that the manager's allegations that the women caused "a disturbance" and used profanity was not true.
In recent years, the company has censored politically biased—but factual—news-focused accounts such as that of MEMRI, flagged accounts that used profanity as inappropriate for advertising, and hidden LGBTQ+ content, including rights advocacy, behind an age-based interstitial.
At 75, a dozen years removed from his time in office, Fox has used profanity and humor to defend Mexicans from Trump's attacks and rebut his contention that he can force Mexico to finance a border wall separating the two countries.
I'll click into the little gray box — you know, they're calling it grayboxing now, grayboxing, shadowbanning — I'll click into the gray box and sometimes there's just somebody who used profanity in their reply to me which is not directed at me, but it had the profanity.
Maryland, February 2016Rent-A-Center has made threatening calls to me and my family members, used profanity, tag my car after I've told them numerous times not to—threats to visit my job, threats to sit outside my home until I let them in, over 10 calls and voicemails a day.
Perez used profanity as he slammed President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE over his health care reform proposals.
Asked earlier this week if Jay Z would censor himself, a Clinton aide said "What Jay Z says it up to Jay Z." There is video footage of Trump saying the F-word and motherf----- in past public appearances, and the Republican nominee has even used profanity on the campaign trail to drive home his message, including saying he would "bomb the s---" out of ISIS.
In December 2018, a former staffer filed a discrimination lawsuit accusing Cook of being an abusive boss who used profanity and racial slurs.
Its findings acknowledged that Rosenberg had used profanity. Elissa Vanaver, the Miami Herald's Vice President of Human Resources, wrote to the Pentagon to inform the authorities of the paper's conclusions reached by their inquiry.
He used profanity and tirades freely to drive his arguments home, and once, famously, refused to attend a mandatory "charm school" course intended to make Merck middle managers more civil. His employees were fiercely loyal to him.
In a July 2009 episode of My Life on the D-List, Griffin used profanity in an Octomom joke during her routine at New York's Apollo Theater. Griffin said she received a letter banning her from the venue.
On 7 September 2016, cast member Chris Jarvis was alleged to have used profanity during a song about kites, sparking outrage among parents and resulting in the CBeebies Facebook page releasing a statement saying "it’s clear that Chris says the word kite".
Hague, who said that he used profanity a lot as a kid, stated that he stopped because "you don't gain anything from it". He took up golf during his early professional baseball career. Hague died from cancer at age 50 in San Antonio, Texas.
IGN felt that of the year's praiseworthy yet unappreciated games, Deathrow alone "truly blew [them] away". Critics praised the game's fast, chaotic action and use of surround sound. The reviewers bemoaned its high difficulty curve, generic soundtrack, and lack of online multiplayer. Some reviewers thought the game used profanity excessively, while others considered it a highlight.
Initially an underground group, DJ DOC became known to mainstream audiences for the satirical content of their lyrics, which often criticized societal injustices and overtly used profanity. It garnered them both popularity and criticism during the mid to late 1990s; their songs became well-known to a younger generation already disgruntled with the government's strict censorship rules regarding free speech but was also censored by radio and television stations for the provocative lyrics.
In 2014 Love made a series of controversial Twitter comments in the wake of the sexual assault allegations against Bill Cosby. Defending Cosby against the charges, Love used profanity and racial slurs against Cosby's accusers as well as comedian Hannibal Buress, who had alluded to the allegations in a stand-up routine. In 2015 Love once again took to Twitter to defend Cosby, dismissing those African Americans who believed the allegations as "spineless monkeys".
Portions of the film were shot at Camp Pendleton, California. The film premiered at Parris Island in May 1957 and was shown during the training of Marine Corps Drill Instructors. Webb's Drill Instructor neither used profanity or physically struck his recruits. Singer Monica Lewis provided a musical interlude, performing the provocative song "(If'n You Don't) Somebody Else Will", backed by the Ray Conniff orchestra and chorus, which was released as a single by Columbia Records.
May was bored and to alleviate the boredom, he wrote the reviews so the first four spreads would spell the words "ROAD", "TEST", "YEAR" and "BOOK". The other pages had another acrostic but that was not immediately recognizable as it was spread over the rest of the magazine, spelling seemingly random letters starting with "SOYO" and "UTHI". After it was published, readers discovered it. This was the one that got James May fired because it used profanity.
La Donna Harris was "a leading feminist and a Comanche Indian [who] labeled herself as 'a woman of color.'" In order to increase public awareness of its existence, the Citizens Party ran a commercial on 600 radio stations which used profanity (the advertisement began with an actor exclaiming: "Bullshit! ... Carter, Reagan and Anderson, it's all bullshit!"). Several of the radio stations tried to remove the profanity, but the Federal Communications Commission forbade them to do so.
On March 1, 2013 he appeared on WWE Smackdown to interview his long-time friend Jack Swagger, and Swagger's new advocate, Zeb Colter. During the segment, Swagger turned against Ross, ending their friendship. On August 16, 2013 while hosting a WWE 2K14 roster announcement panel with guests, Ross was suspected of being intoxicated. He used profanity during several points and appeared to have little to no interest in the topics that were scheduled to be covered.
Midnight Marquee Press. Page 61 Barilli intended to make the film himself, but had trouble securing backing and balked at the producers wanting Shelly Winters in the lead role. So he sold the idea to Griffi and let him produce and direct it, retitling it The Trap. Barilli said of the finished product "Lets' talk frankly here, that movie sucks...." and Fulci even used profanity alluding to his opinion of Griffi, who he felt stole his chance to direct the film.
Johnson received negative attention after she confirmed that she was pregnant with her fourth child, unlike the previous three children, this one was out of wedlock. Johnson continued to perform and minister through the pregnancy. In September 2015, Johnson broadcast for 10 minutes on Periscope while drinking Patron, a brand of tequila. During the broadcast, she used profanity, criticized the church, including Christians who were being hypocritical, doing similar things while attempting to adhere to holy standards of Christian living.
Local law in Virginia Beach prohibiting the use of profanity along the boardwalk of Atlantic Avenue. In the United States, courts have generally ruled that the government does not have the right to prosecute someone solely for the use of an expletive, which would be a violation of their right to free speech enshrined in the First Amendment. On the other hand, they have upheld convictions of people who used profanity to incite riots, harass people, or disturb the peace.How Swearing Works, HowStuffWorks.
I like to try to capture the > idiom and slang... A writer at that time wouldn't have used profanity in a > respectable novel. But if you look at diaries or letters, people were > swearing all the time, in very modern-sounding ways. One of the excitements > about writing about the past from the present is that you can put in a lot > of the details that the mainstream novelists of the time couldn't because of > the conventions of the time.
August 2008, DC Comics All Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder was a mature-readers comic in which street thugs used profanity. However, DC did not want this language to actually appear in the book, so the text was placed in the speech bubbles and then blacked-out. However, in issue #10, slightly different shades of ink were used in the two elements leaving the vulgar words just readable. Frank Miller was quoted as saying "This is the first I've heard of it," he said.
This would be the first time Chester Bennington used profanity on any studio material after "System" from the soundtrack to Queen of the Damned. The song was made available as a single on March 3, 2008. It is included as a master track in the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Nintendo Wii versions of the music video game Rock Revolution, though this version is heavily censored. The song was also used in the trailer and commercials for the 2009 film Crank: High Voltage, in which Bennington makes a cameo.
In Life on the Mississippi, Twain portrays Bixby as an "irascible but lovable mentor." One point on which Bixby's friends took issue with Twain was his portrayal of Bixby as "a profane man," that is, as someone who occasionally used profanity for emphasis in conversation. They reported him to be a person who was always "gentle of speech." Note however that there was a difference in the etiquette of shore-based discourse and that on board a vessel, where the use of bad language by the crew (among themselves) was commonplace, and even expected.
Ban Johnson was the president of the Western League and was the eventual president of the American League. Johnson hoped to clean up the sport of baseball by purchasing the league, including allowing umpires to suspend players who used profanity and disputed calls. Johnson hoped to use his league as an example of a well-run league that was organized, profitable, entertaining and appealing. In Johnson's first season at the helm of the Western League, 1894, most of the league's franchises turned a profit and by 1895 attendance began to climb for teams around the league.
Cooney was the home plate umpire in Game 4 of the 1990 American League Championship Series where he ejected Boston Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens with two out in the bottom of the second inning after Clemens used profanity while arguing balls and strikes. While the Red Sox vehemently protested, Cooney also ejected Marty Barrett from the bench for throwing water coolers on the field. The incident caused a 15-minute delay in the game. At the time, the Red Sox were trailing the Oakland Athletics 1–0 and eventually lost 3–1, being swept in four games.
When viewers saw the ball through a high camera angle, it is revealed that the ball covered the entire stage. This lasted approximately 10 seconds before Fox returned to Romano. The reason for the censorship of this comment has been debated between vulgar language or revealing an important plot line to the show. When Katherine Heigl accepted her award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, she accidentally used profanity in her speech, causing Fox to cut the audio and once again replaced its feed with the pre-recorded shot of the display ball, only to return a moment later.
Clean Comedians was founded in 1990 largely as an alternative to comics and entertainers like Andrew Dice Clay and Howard Stern, who used profanity extensively in their performances. Adam Christing noticed the trend of more vulgar comedians and felt that there would be a sizable market for curse-free performers. He drafted the "10 Commandments of Comedy," which were essentially "clean" guidelines for performers offered to meeting and event planners. He would later devise the "NO G.R.O.S.S." pledge, which stated that performers could not incorporate gender bashing, racist jabs, obscenity, sexual innuendo, or swearing into their acts.
This performance itself was rather famous for the events surrounding Gerard; he had overslept in his hotel room after partying late and binge-watching "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" on Netflix, lost his jacket, was forced to borrow his roommate's jacket, and accidentally used profanity on live TV after his win. He was the youngest winter Olympian to win a gold since 1928. He became the first Winter Olympics medalist born in the 2000s. Gerard was also the first American gold medalist in the 2018 Winter Olympics, and the youngest American to medal in a snowboarding event at the Olympics.
Later, during the Mexican concert, in response to these comments, Madonna wore a charro sombrero and simulated an orgy with her dancers onstage. Continuing her provocative work, Madonna starred in the erotic thriller Body of Evidence, which features her fully nude engaging in simulated sexual acts. In March 1994, she was a guest on Late Show with David Letterman, used profanity, and handed Letterman a pair of her underwear asking him to smell it. The release of her sexually explicit works, and the aggressive appearance on Letterman led some critics to see Madonna as a sexual renegade.
Harper's Weekly, May 13, 1865 He regularly attended meetings at the Fulton and Bromfield Street churches where his enthusiastic behavior earned him the nickname "The Glory to God man". In an attempt to imitate Jesus, Corbett began to wear his hair very long (he was forced to cut it upon enlisting in the Union Army). In 1857, Corbett began working at a hat manufacturer's shop on Washington Street in downtown Boston. He was reported to be a proficient milliner, but was known to proselytize frequently and stop work to pray and sing for co-workers who used profanity in his presence.
This was not true, as demonstrated by the existence of an unedited Gatchaman version released by ADV Films in the US, in which Keyop rarely, if ever, used profanity. The in-story explanation for Keyop's unique manner of speech is that he is an artificial life form with a speech impediment because of slightly defective genetic engineering. The main villain, known as Zoltar in BotP, had an unusual background due to the hermaphroditic nature of the original Berg Katse character. In an episode where Katse's female half was featured (BotP title: "The Galaxy Girls"), she was introduced as a separate character, Zoltar's sister, for BotP.
On 23 July 2008, The Guardian media blog published an email from Coren to sub-editors at The Times. Coren's internal Times email used profanity, the use of which he defends, to take issue with a colleague's removal of an indefinite article (an "a") from his piece, which he believed ruined a joke in his last line. Coren said a joke was lost in the change from "a nosh" (meaning fellatio) to "nosh"—a word derived from Yiddish meaning "food", which he doubted his editors knew better than he. The Daily Telegraph said the incident was "not the first time the critic has been caught out writing abusive emails to colleagues".
By contrast, most of the traditional religious profanities are not considered very offensive today; this is in line with Sweden's long-standing secularism. Some commonly used profanity is borrowed from other languages, such as English: Shit vad snygg hon är ('Damn, she looks good'), German: Det var en scheissefilm ('That was a crappy movie'), and Finnish: Perkele! (the latter usually for comic effect). An overt attitude expressed regarding this phenomenon may be that some Swedish speakers find the native profanities lacking the required 'punch'; again this might be related to the perceived ineffectiveness of the traditional religious profanities; borrowing allows speakers to avoid the much more offensive native sexual vocabulary.
In Tim Burton's Ed Wood, Lugosi is portrayed by Martin Landau, who received the 1994 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for the performance. According to Bela G. Lugosi (his son), Forrest Ackerman, Dolores Fuller and Richard Sheffield, the film's portrayal of Lugosi is inaccurate: In real life, he never used profanity, owned small dogs, or slept in coffins. And contrary to this film, Bela did not struggle performing on The Red Skelton Show. Three Lugosi projects were featured on the television show Mystery Science Theater 3000. The 1942 film The Corpse Vanishes appeared in episode 105; the serial The Phantom Creeps appeared throughout season two, and the Ed Wood production Bride of the Monster in episode 423.
He sought out Irvine, had a heated discussion with the Northern Irishman and punched him in the side of the head; then Senna went on live television for post-race interviews, and used profanity on the live recording in frustration at Irvine, other drivers' alleged bad behavior on the track and at the media, who he claimed were "irresponsible" for sensationalizing some of Senna's dangerous on-track behavior. By 1994, Prost had retired and Senna was killed at the San Marino Grand Prix, and the Japanese GP that year saw Hill and German Michael Schumacher battle for the Drivers' Championship. Hill crucially won the race ahead of Schumacher; Suzuka was hammered by a torrential downpour which made conditions very difficult for Hill as Schumacher was an acknowledged specialist in wet-weather conditions. 1995 saw an incredible drive from French-Italian Jean Alesi on dry slick tyres in damp conditions.

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