lend otherwise ordinary sentences a feeling of aggression and menace. They turn commonplace sentiments, sentiments one might be inclined to ignore (“Turn the music down, please”) into expressions that grab you by the ears and force you to listen (“Please turn that s— down”). It’s that function of profanity—to heighten the importance of common utterances—that makes it so dangerous to useful thinking. Very few of our utterances are intrinsically important, and every sentence bearing the f-word (or one of its cousins) gets a promotion, deserved or not.Listening to this kind of speech is like listening to a pleasant song constantly interrupted by jackhammer blasts and loud recordings of fingers running down blackboards. It gets your attention, but soon you’ll go away to find a quiet place where you can actually hear the song. Unless you stay too long and get used to it, as many people apparently have.
See David Mill's article on the use of profanity here.

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