thumb|upright|Mailbox sign using [[French-Canadian profanity. The closest English translation of sentiment and severity is "No fucking junkmail". is the strongest form of that , derived from (where the Eucharist is stored, in Roman Catholicism).]]

Quebec French profanities, known as (singular: ; from the verb , "to consecrate"), are words and expressions related to Catholicism and its liturgy that are used as strong profanities in Quebec French (the main variety of Canadian French), Acadian French (spoken in Maritime Provinces, east of Quebec, and parts of Aroostook County, Maine, in the United States), and traditionally French-speaking areas across Canada. are considered stronger in Québec than the sexual and scatological profanities common to other varieties of French (such as , "shit").

History

The originated in the early 19th century, when the social control exerted by the Catholic clergy was increasingly a source of frustration.

  • :
  • :
  • :
  • : (from the English "cream puff"),
  • :
  • : (from the English "Moses")
  • :
  • : (anagram of ), (merge of and ),

The following are also considered milder profanity:

  • : "bastard"
  • : "boob", used to denote a breast or a complete idiot
  • (): "harm to God"
  • (): "shit", used in conjunction with other words, sometimes profanity: , , , , , , or ,
  • : a mix between and

Sometimes older people unable to bring themselves to swear with church words or their derivatives would make up ostensibly innocuous phrases, such as (literally, "five or six boxes of green tomatoes", being slang for , "green"). This phrase when pronounced quickly by a native speaker sounds like ("holy ciborium of the tabernacle"). Another example of a benign word that is church sounding is , which was simply an anglicism for "coal-tar", but pronounced just so, sounds like a merged and ("harm").

Intricate forms

thumb|[[Graffiti in Montreal, Quebec (loosely translated as "We don't give a fuck [about] the special law")]]

In Québec French, swear words can be combined into more powerful combinations to express extreme anger or disgust.

Non-profane uses

A slang term with the preposition means "a lot of": (or , etc.) means "a lot of food", similar to English constructs such as "fuck-ton" or "shitload".

are often used as verbs too. For example, means "to beat the fuck out of", "to kick one's ass" or, more literally, "to give a beating", where is used as a stronger form of "to give" ( in French). There are constructions like or , which means "to leave" or "to destroy", using the prefix, which is about separation. Others include or ("to not give a damn"), or ("to run away"), and . Some are even found as adverbs, such as , meaning "very" or "extremely", as in ("This is really good"). or can mean "extremely angry".

In the movie Bon Cop, Bad Cop, Quebec actor and stand-up comic Patrick Huard's character teaches Colm Feore's how to swear properly.

These expressions are found less commonly in literature, but rappers and other singers often use and as a rhyme. More traditional singers also use these words, such as Quebec singer Plume Latraverse.

One fine example of the use of as different word classes is a dialogue by called . The phrase ("Jules, who was irritated, violently ejected Jacques, who was angry.") becomes ("That fucker, who was pissed off, kicked out that dickhead, who was fucking furious.") with each content word (noun, verb, adjective or adverb) replaced with a profane synonym. This usage of is similar to the form of Russian swearing known as .

Possible Protestant origin

The expression of ideas linked to the Protestant (Huguenot) faith can be considered, looking at both the initial meaning expressed by the swear words and the geographic origin of the settlers of New-France.

Since the roughly twenty initial words have generated close to four-hundred euphemisms and thousands of set constructions, all equally present in all regions of Quebec, it would make more sense to have them begin their development at an earlier time than the mid-nineteenth century.

Meaning

The main Quebec swear words refer to aspects of Catholic worship and practice that Calvinists have historically rejected or objected to, including eucharistic adoration, transubstantiation, the Virgin Mary () and simony (). They are expressed in French rather than Latin.

"The reformers unanimously rejected transubstantiation, ... understand that words alone are not strong enough to illustrate this philosophy" and "You have to understand the hatred they feel in the face of what they perceive as a fraud".

Settler origin

thumb|16th-century religious geopolitics on a map of modern France

thumb|Origins of immigrants to New France from 1608–1700

About a third of the established settlers came from the in the Northern part of Normandy "The ... formed a kind of triangle bounded by the port cities of Rouen, Dieppe and Le Havre. These three communities stand out as the only real points of concentration (settler provenance in Normandy)" also "The housed probably the largest concentration of rural Protestants north of the Loire" and another third from the Poitou area (which includes , , ), where lived France's greatest concentrations of Huguenots at that time.

It appears that throughout the New-France period, settlement originated from French Protestant strongholds as the increasing pressure from the Counter-Reformation made it harder and harder for them to live in France. This would suggest that Quebec swear words were originally an expression of their religious principles.

Comparison to other languages

The use of liturgical profanity is not unique to Canadian French or Quebec. In Italian, although to a lesser extent, some analogous words are in use: in particular, (host) and (more so in the past) are relatively common expressions in the northeast, which are lighter (and a little less common) than the typical blasphemies in use in Italy, such as (pig god) and (see Italian profanity). Modifying the terms into euphemistic equivalents is used in Italy; for example, is commonly modified to (a type of restaurant). The word has produced the verb , which colloquially means "to use blasphemy".

Other dialects in the world feature this kind of profanity, such as the expressions and in Austro-Bavarian and in Czech. is an expletive expression in some Spanish dialects. In Catalan, is used and is frequently abbreviated to . Spanish also uses ("I shit on ...") followed by "God", "the blessed chalice", "the Virgin" and other terms, religious or not. It can be shortened to just or ("Blessed chalice!"). In Romanian, the profanity ("Your mother's host!") is sometimes used with "Easter", "Christ", "Cross", "Commemoration" (), "sacred oil lamp" (), "God", "Church", etc.

Sheila Fischman's translation of La Guerre, yes Sir! (published under that title in French and English and meaning roughly "War, you bet!"), by Roch Carrier, leaves many in the original Quebec French, since they have no real equivalent in English. She gives a brief explanation and history of these terms in her introduction, including a few not listed here. At a crucial point in the story, a boy swears in the presence of his father. For the first time, instead of beating or punishing his son, the father swears back. This represents the boy's passage into manhood.

Irish Catholics of old employed a similar practice, whereby "ejaculations" were used to express frustration without cursing or profaning (taking the Lord's name in vain). This typically involved the recitation of a rhyming couplet, where a shocked person might say, "Jesus who, for love of me / Died on the Cross at Calvary" instead of "Jesus!" This is often abbreviated simply to "Jesus-hoo-fer-luv-a-me", an expression still heard among elderly Irish people. "Jesus, Mary and Joseph!" is used in Quebec French:

Hungarians, primarily Catholics, follow the same suit: instead of (God) or as a curse, (the God of it!), they often use another word which also begins with : (the school of it!) or (the stable of it!).

See also

  • Joual
  • Sacred–profane dichotomy

References

  • Swearing in Quebec: If you profane something no one holds sacred, does it make a swear? — The Economist
  • The history of Tabernak - QuebecCity101.com