Category talk:English vulgarities

Confusing old and new meaning of the term
I think there's a major systemic confusion between the modern "vulgar", meaning "offensive", and the archaic "vulgar", meaning "colloquial" or "informal". A lot of older terms, including virtually everything from the 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, have been misidentified as offensive, when in fact they're just colloquialisms.

Some of these should be categorized as interjections
Would it not be correct to categorize some of these terms under the interjections hierarchy? Should this apply only to swearwords? __meco 15:05, 15 March 2007 (UTC)

Def. Watch Muff
Watch Muff: ie smelling the area of your watch or jewelry where it touches the skin, also smelling government effects when on a government watch list or smelling the articles of human user interface of a terminal (having watch muff aids) when watching a moving figure as in the dow (watch muff prostitution) or a dutch auction (sometimes confused with masturbating WM or using a time piece to ejaculate yourself during a time change.)