The word "expletive" is also commonly defined as a
profanity or curse word, apart from its grammatical function. An early example occurs in a sermon by
Isaac Barrow published in 1741. :" … his oaths are no more than waste and insignificant words, deprecating being taken for serious, or to be understood that he meaneth anything by them, but only that he useth them as expletive phrases … to plump his speech, and fill up sentences." ::
Sermons on Evil-speaking, Isaac Barrow (1741) Not all profanities are grammatical expletives (and vice versa). For example, in the sentence, "The bloody thing is shit, hey": • "Bloody", as an attributive
adjective, is an optional constituent of the sentence (thus not an expletive in the syntactical sense) and is a profanity. • "Shit" is necessary to the sentence, and it is a profanity. • "Hey" is not a profanity, but it is unnecessary.
"Expletive deleted" The popularity of the phrase "expletive deleted" derives from the
Watergate hearings in the United States in the 1970s, where the phrase was used to replace profanity that occurred in the transcripts of conversations that were recorded in the
White House. == "Do" as an expletive==