Book Review: Curse + Berate In 69+ Languages, Edited By R.V. Branham
Published February 26, 2008
Sex: there's no getting away from it when it comes to swearing it seems. Somehow being able to work the subject of sex or sexuality into your invective makes it all that more potent. What that says about most cultures' attitudes towards sex isn't very complimentary, as it means that the subject is still obviously taboo or considered somehow dirty, but next to references to God, I'd have to say that sexual activity and defecation are the most prominent features of cursing across the board. (Being able to combine the three into one curse is the sign of an extremely inventive mind and obviously an ideal to strive for in your own attempts.)
Aside from the obvious benefits of attempting to build bridges between cultures that a book like this strives for by showing the reader that no matter where we live we have so much linguistically in common, I'd be remiss in mentioning just how much fun this book is. If you don't have any hang-ups about swearing -- and if you did I doubt you'd even open the damned thing -- Curse + Berate In 69+ Languages will have you laughing so hard that it will hurt.
Some of the funniest parts of the book are the literal translations of other languages' expressions. While an idiom taken as a whole will have one meaning, and that can be funny enough - when translated word for word it becomes even more outlandish and hilarious. Some of the best examples for this are some of the Chinese dialects - check out the Mandarin slang for breasts and you'll see what I mean.
Curse + Berate In 69+ Languages is one of the funniest, most intelligent, and inventive books on language that you will ever come across. If this book doesn't give you a new respect for the wonder of words - nothing will.
- Book Review: Curse + Berate In 69+ Languages, Edited By R.V. Branham
- Published: February 26, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: History, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Reference, Culture: Humor and Satire, Review
- Writer: Richard Marcus
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Richard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at 






