51³Ô¹Ï

Advertisement

Advertisement

minced oath

[ minst ohth ]

noun

  1. a word used in place of a swear word for the sake of politeness, often resembling the profane word or expression closely enough in sound and syllable structure that the substituted curse is still identifiable:

    He said, “Dash it!†a minced oath that did not offend those around him.



Discover More

51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins

Origin of minced oath1

First recorded in 1790–1800
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

According to The Washington Examiner, Cawthorn may have taken part in an alleged pump-and-dump scheme to boost the value of "Let's Go Brandon" cryptocurrency, a crypto meme coin named after a minced oath that actually means "F*ck Joe Biden."

From

A GOP Senate candidate on Sunday ran a Super Bowl ad repeating the conservative political slogan "Let's Go Brandon" – a minced oath for "F*ck Joe Biden."

From

The accusation then prompted multiple members of the crowd to shout, "Let's Go Brandon," a minced oath for "F*ck Joe Biden."

From

Mr Grieve’s maps for “gosh†in America show this “minced oath†to be popular not only in Mormon Utah, but in a contiguous region of the inland south, from Texas to Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee and Kentucky.

From

School administrators likewise appreciate that the most explicit dialogue in John Cariani’s PG-rated script is the minced oath “Jeezum Crow.â€

From

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement