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#: ''Zagi, '''ashar''', da kuma wasu maganganun batsa furci ne da ake amfani da su kowace rana a duniya ta yau. <> Cursing, '''profanity''', and other forms of obscene language are part of everyday speech in today’s world.'' | #: ''Zagi, '''ashar''', da kuma wasu maganganun batsa furci ne da ake amfani da su kowace rana a duniya ta yau. <> Cursing, '''profanity''', and other forms of obscene language are part of everyday speech in today’s world.'' | ||
See [https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0020/225335/offensive-language-quick-reference-guide.pdf?utm_source=podnews.net&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=podnews.net:2021-09-27 Here, from the UK broadcast regulator Ofcom, a research into swearwords] via [https://podnews.net/update/podcasting-popular-countries podnews] | |||
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Latest revision as of 07:56, 27 September 2021
Verb
Plain form (yanzu) |
3rd-person singular (ana cikin yi) |
Past tense (ya wuce) |
Past participle (ya wuce) |
Present participle (ana cikin yi) |
- to take an oath <> rantse, yi rantsuwa.
- he found it necessary to swear to the truthfulness of what he wrote. <> ya rantse cewa abin da ya rubuta gaskiya ne.
- I swear by God <> Na rantse da Allah.
- to curse someone mildly <> zaga, yi wa zagi, yi tir da.
- Zagi, ashar, da kuma wasu maganganun batsa furci ne da ake amfani da su kowace rana a duniya ta yau. <> Cursing, profanity, and other forms of obscene language are part of everyday speech in today’s world.
- (strongly) la'anta
- use swear words profusely, obscene or vulgar language. <> yi ashar, ya ashariya. mugun baki ko ɗanyen baki.
- Synonym: profanity
- Sa’ad da na yi aure, ni da maigidana mun ƙaura zuwa yankin da ake yawan yin ashar da maye da kuma shan taba. <> When I married, my husband and I moved to an area where cursing, drunkenness, and smoking were the norm.
- Zagi, ashar, da kuma wasu maganganun batsa furci ne da ake amfani da su kowace rana a duniya ta yau. <> Cursing, profanity, and other forms of obscene language are part of everyday speech in today’s world.
See Here, from the UK broadcast regulator Ofcom, a research into swearwords via podnews