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In the study of language and , a vulgarism is an expression or usage considered non-standard or characteristic of uneducated speech or writing. In or lexical English, "vulgarism" or "" may be with or , but a linguistic or literary vulgarism encompasses a broader category of perceived fault not confined to or sexual offensiveness. These faults may include errors of pronunciation, , word malformations,Johannes Tromp, The Assumption of Moses: A Critical Edition with Commentary, Studia in Veteris Testamenti Pseudepigrapha (Brill, 1993), pp. 27, 39–40, 243. and . "" is generally used in the more restricted sense. In regular and mostly informal conversations, the presence of vulgarity, if any, are mostly for intensifying, exclaiming or scolding. In modern times, vulgarism continues to be frequently used by people. A paper produced by Oxford University in 2005 shows that the age group of 10–20 years old speak more vulgarity than the rest of the world's combined. The frequent and prevalent usage of vulgarity as a whole has led to a , in which people use vulgarity so often that it becomes less and less offensive to people, according to The New York Times.


Classicism
The English word "vulgarism" derives ultimately from vulgus, "the common people", often as a meaning "the unwashed masses, undifferentiated herd, a mob". In classical studies, as the Latin of everyday life is conventionally contrasted to , the literary language exemplified by the (, , , , among others).J. N. Adams, Bilingualism and the Latin Language, pp. 300–301, 765, et passim Social Variation and the Latin Language (Cambridge University Press, 2013), pp. 3–5. This distinction was always an untenable mode of literary criticism, unduly problematizing, for instance, the so-called "Silver Age" novelist , whose complex and sophisticated prose style in the is full of conversational vulgarisms.Andrew Laird, Powers of Expression, Expressions of Power: Speech Presentation and Latin Literature (Oxford University Press, 1999), p. 250.


Social class
Vulgarism has been a particular concern of traditionalists.Tony Crowley, Language in History: Theories and Texts (Routledge, 1996), pp. 168–169. In the 1920s, the English defined "vulgarism" as:
a peculiarity which intrudes itself into , and is of such a nature as to be associated with the speech of vulgar or uneducated speakers. The origin of pure vulgarisms is usually that they are importations, not from a regional but from a class —in this case from a dialect which is not that of a province, but of a low or uneducated social class. ... A is usually a variety of Standard English, but a bad variety.Henry Wyld, as quoted by Crowley (1996) p. 169.
The moral and aesthetic values explicit in such a definition depends on viewed as authoritative. For instance, the "misuse" of aspiration (, such as pronouncing "have" as ave") has been considered a mark of the lower classes in England at least since the late 18th century,Manfred Görlach, English in Nineteenth-Century England: An Introduction (Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 57Ossi Ihalainen, "The Dialects of English since 1776", in The Cambridge History of the English Language (Cambridge University Press, 1994), vol. 5, pp. 216–217. as dramatized in My Fair Lady. Because linguistic vulgarism betrayed social class, its avoidance became an aspect of . In 19th-century England, books such as The Vulgarisms and Improprieties of the English Language (1833) by W. H. Savage, reflected upper-middle-class anxieties about "correctness and good breeding".

Vulgarisms in a literary work may be used deliberately to further , by use of "" or simply by choice.


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