Euphemisms
A euphemism is a polite word or
expression that people use when they are talking about
something which they or other people may find unpleasant,
upsetting or embarrassing. When we use euphemisms we
are protecting ourselves from the reality of what is said.
There are many euphemisms that refer to sex,
bodily functions, war, death, etc. Euphemisms are
often good examples of idiomatic language use.
Examples:
He passed away (i.e. died)
after a long illness (i.e. cancer).
I decided to come out (i.e.
admit to being homosexual). I didn't want to
be outed (i.e. allow others to let it be
known that I am homosexual).
It's no good. I can't hold it in.
I shall have to spend a penny (i.e.
urinate).
We keep the adult (i.e
pornographic) magazines on the top shelf and the adult
videos under the counter.
You know that we're in the middle
of a rightsizing exercise (i.e. compulsory
redundancy programme). We have no alternative but
to let you go (i.e. sack you).
Many of the outlying villages
suffered collateral damage (i.e. civilian
deaths).
Spend a penny derives from the
days when there were door locks on the outside of
cubicles in public lavatories which could only be opened
by inserting one old penny into the lock. This was not
just the pre-euro era. It was the pre-decimal era. The
expression is still in frequent use today.
Collateral damage is unintended
damage and civilian casualities and deaths caused by the
dropping of bombs in the course of a military operation.
The term is of US origin and was first used to describe
deaths in the Vietnam War, then in the Gulf War, then in the
action (euphemism!) in Serbia at the end of the 1990s
and most recently in Afghanistan.
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