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  • In Good Omens, Aziraphale, an Angel actually says a very emphatic "Fuck." just before he dies. Almost. It was the first such instance in 6000 years. More than one reader had to put the book down. Everything about the character is the antithesis of a curse, so a hardened Cluster F Bomber will still burst into shocked giggles. Incidentally, this is easily the most obscene moment in the entire book.
    • The book has also spent the entire time up until the actual swearing mercilessly hanging lampshades on the fact that he doesn't swear wherever possible, in lines like, "Oh dear," muttered Aziaraphale with the practiced ease of one who has spent six thousand years not swearing ..." This helps to lend the appropriate amount of gravity to the moment whan it does occur.
    • There are precisely two F-words in Terry Pratchett's entire works. The other is spoken by Kin in Strata.
  • Mostly Harmless, spoken by Arthur to Ford, at the end of the worst day of his [Arthur's] life.
    • The Narrator gets one in Chapter 25 of So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish in a tangent about the nature of Arthur's sexuality (read: if he actually had one):
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 "This Arthur Dent," comes the cry from the farthest reaches of the galaxy, and has even now been found inscribed on a deep space probe thought to originate from an alien galaxy at a distance too hideous to contemplate, "what is he, man or mouse? Is he interested in nothing more than tea and the wider issues of life? Has he no spirit? Has he no passion? Does he not, to put it in a nutshell, fuck?"

Those who wish to know should read on. Others may wish to skip on to the last chapter which is a good bit and has Marvin in it.

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      • This is especially effective because it's the first time the word "fuck" is said in the entire series. And this is in the fourth book, in a series that is remarkably tame (the worst language before that, iirc, is the word "shit" ... once). But it really carries much more weight when Arthur says it in Mostly Harmless because he is normally impressively tolerant of Ford Prefect's nonsense up to this point. In comparison, when Ford says it later in the same book, it's done casually and no one is supposed to care.
        • Only in the American edition. Elsewhere, the word "fuck" first appears in the previous book, in reference to the award for "Most Gratuitous Use of the Word 'Fuck' in a Serious Screenplay".
    • Zaphod's use of "Belgium!" when they're in the ice cave in the original radio series is an example in-universe - he'd never normally use such strong language unless something was really wrong, and it prompts Ford to take the situation seriously.
      • Speaking of Belgium, the use of the word "Belgium" as an expletive is, in the books, established when Arthur runs afoul of a movie star who is extremely proud of having won an award for the most gratuitous use of such in a movie. There is a hilarious exchange revolving around Arthur trying to make sense of what's so offensive about the word Belgium..
        • Only in the American edition. Elsewhere...
  • In Peter David's Star Trek novel Vendetta, a Federation ship (not the Enterprise) sees the Planet Eater doing its thing, and an Ensign swears and then he apologizes to the captain, since that's frowned on; but the captain says that, no, that's quite all right; that's really the best way to describe the situation.
    • In the Star Trek: Vanguard novel Precipice, a civilian character warned against helping a pre-warp culture fight the Klingons responds "Fuck the Prime Directive". Possibly the first use of the f-word in the entire Trekverse.
  • In Neil Gaiman's Stardust, Yvaine whispers fuck in very small letters just after hitting the ground. It is the only rude word in a book otherwise full of rich, subtle, poetic language.
  • In Larry Niven's Known Space series, an example from the Beowulf Schaeffer short story "Flatlander", with Lampshade Hanging.
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 Bey: Have you noticed in me a tendency to use profanity for emphasis?

Elephant: Not really. Why?

Bey: It's goddamn radioactive out there.

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  • J. K. Rowling managed a Precision Bitch Strike in Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows - by sweet Molly Weasley of all people. "NOT MY DAUGHTER, YOU BITCH!" (This is not including when Aunt Marge says the word "bitch" in book three, in literal reference to a female dog.)
    • Marge's use is a subtler example, as while it makes sense literally, the other sense of the word is clearly implied as well. (Marge compares Harry's alleged behavioral problems and his mother's alleged similar traits to dog breeding, stating "If there's something wrong with the bitch, there'll be something wrong with the pup." As Harry realizes from the moment that came out of her mouth that she had aimed a Your Mom joke at him, the next plot points are promptly set in motion)
  • "I'M GONNA KILL YOU, YOU LYING COCKSUCKER!!!", anyone remember that one?
  • In the Doctor Who Expanded Universe novels, when the Eighth Doctor is frustrated he usually says things like "fiddlesticks" and "sugarmice". But due to being widowed, getting his heart torn out of his chest (don't worry, he has another one), generally having a very bad time of it, suffering from severe Bad Dreams, and having to deal with two formidable villains at once, he starts feeling pretty stressed and refers to one of said villains as a "son of a bitch." Also used to play up the weirdness of a Freaky Friday situation.
  • In Heinlein's Starship Troopers, Juan Rico's first day of boot camp introduces Sergeant Zim, whose first act is to rant for several consecutive minutes on the various shortcomings (moral, mental, and physical) of the recruits, never once repeating himself or using profanity. Zim reserves profanity for when he's really serious. Rico spends most of the monologue wishing they had had someone with Zim's command of language on his debate team at school.
  • The Catcher in The Rye: the graffiti at the school, near the end of the book.
  • In the Watership Down novel, just as the heroes are about to attack the Warren of the Snares, Fiver, who is timid by nature, screams "Embleer Frith" — which translates roughly to "Damn God", to get them to stop.
    • Later in the book, Bigwig tells Woundwort to "Silflay hraka, u embleer rah" — this translates to "Eat shit, O Stinking King".
      • Though this may not qualify, as Bigwig isn't exactly the most timid of characters. In fact, this scene, while also qualifying for a Crowning Moment of Awesome, establishes him as the biggest, meanest, most dangerous rabbit in the novel. Which is saying something, considering who Woundwort is.
  • Sam Vimes in Men At Arms screams "I'm the law you Sons of Bitches!", while he's being possessed by the gonne.
    • The Discworld books are pretty good at precision swearing, actually. When someone says "Oh, bugger," they really mean it.
      • Unless it's Foul Ol' Ron.
    • Latatian example in Interesting Times. "Stercus, stercus, stercus, moritorus sum!" ("Shit, shit, shit, I'm about to die!")
  • Warrior Cats: In Moonrise, Leafpool exclaims "Mouse dung!" (which is essentially the cat equivalent of "Dammit!") shortly after failing to catch a mouse. She never really pseudo-swears at all, and is usually polite, so it was likely done to convey how ThunderClan has been effected by the extreme shortage of prey and how desperate they are for food.
    • Tallstar refusing Tigerstar's demands and publicly calling him a "piece of foxdung" ("piece of shit") in The Darkest Hour seems to carry more weight, being said by the stereotypically meek WindClan leader, and only makes it more of a Crowning Moment of Awesome for him.
  • Robin Hobb uses the F-word only a very few times in her books, meaning each has maximum impact. Towards the end of the Realm of the Elderlings novel Ship of Destiny, after Kennith rapes Althea, her nephew Wintrow defends him, causing Althea to scream at him: "Fuck you, Wintrow!"
  • Star Wars Expanded Universe, Dark Nest Trilogy. You know things are bad when Luke Skywalker swears. He'd forgotten there were small children present.
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 Ben Skywalker: "Dad? What's 'kriffing'?"

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    • Ben tends to throw profanity around fairly freely when in annoying situations (as long as there's no one around; all right, his parents are exceptions, but the point stands), but if it's not the kind of profanity you usually see in a Star Wars book (almost always mentioned in passing and not actually printed), you know something very bad happened. The last sentence of the leading quote for this page, which is best summarized as "Oh crap, the Sith are back" is about as profane as you can get while still staying safe for work; it made me laugh, at least.
  • In War And Remembrance, this word is only used once, by Janice Henry to a Japanese grocer right after the Pearl Harbor attack.
  • Honor Harrington, being an Officer and a Lady, never uses profanity. But when she does, it's a tactical Precision F-Strike with no survivors.
    • Queen Elizabeth III uses "cluster fuck" to describe her feelings on Solly Admiral Byng's idiocy at New Tuscany in Storm from the Shadows.
  • In Contact, Ellie Arroway typically sticks to "Holy Toledo!", but after the Very Large Array finally picks up on what looks like a genuine message from extraterrestrials, she takes a moment to retreat to her office, closes the door behind her, and whispers "Holy shit!"
  • In The Girl's Guide to Hunting and Fishing, the main character works for an annoyingly put-together, professional, well-educated Yamato Nadeshiko type, and mentions that all this makes hearing her Precision F Strikes like seeing a strong man cry.
  • Inverted in the Shadowrun novel Night's Pawn, where the main character's occasional use of the word "fuck" has such an impact because he's the only person who still uses such an antiquated swear word. A member of the opposition even calls it "quaint".
  • Mercedes Lackey's By the Sword. In a series full of Oh My Gods and Unusual Euphemisms, when Kero starts her Insignia Rip Off Ritual by declaring "I've never heard such a crock of shit in my life", it certainly grabs your attention.
  • In Fragment, the President of the United States gets one of these, when the Henders Island natives appear on screen, revealing that a nonhuman race of intelligent beings exists and has befriended the camera crew.
  • In one of the Garrett, P.I. novels, Garrett is startled when his friend Morley says "Shit!", as Morley doesn't often use non-elven profanity. Circumstances, however, make it appropriate, as a carnivorous dinosaur just stuck its head in the window of the coach they're sitting in.
  • Used throughout David Weber's Safehold series. It's rather telling when the first line of dialogue from one of the Sinister Minister antagonists after their plan to destroy the protagonist kingdom fails spectacularly is "Who the fuck do these people think they are?"
  • In The Handmaid's Tale: "My red skirt is hitched up to my waist, though no higher. Below it the Commander is fucking. What he is fucking is the lower part of my body."
  • The only occurence of a swear word stronger than "hell" or "damn" in The Bartimaeus Trilogy (and those were used pretty sparingly too) was when a minor character called Jane Faraar a bitch, which she takes as a compliment. (Fitting considering she's a werewolf, or at the very least, runs a team of werewolves.)
  • In the Temeraire novels we have a book and a half of swear words no stronger than damn or hell and then suddenly we get the line "Fire, fire you fucking yellow-arsed millers!"
  • The Dresden Files is rarely very shy about a few swears here and there, but some characters are less prone to bouts of language than others. In The Warrior a short story from Side Jobs Michael, a devout catholic man who has never in the 12 main books of the series said so much as hell or damn--and has repeatedly reproached Harry for using same--delivers the line: "The son of a bitch hurt my little girl." Coming from him, it's so shocking that even Harry is taken aback.
  • In Gun, With Occasional Music, the First-Person Smartass narrator ends one chapter, when he's just figured out something vital about his case, with "It was time to quit fucking around."
  • While the Nightside series doesn't exactly shun profanity, one stellar example of this trope appears in The Good, The Bad And The Uncanny, when Walker has the gall to speak approvingly of duty and responsibility to a woman who's lost all three of her sons to duty, one way or another. She tells him to fuck off, and John Taylor nearly bursts into applause when she does so.
  • Used in Goth Girl Rising, the sequel to The Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl. Also a Wham! Line, as it reveals why the otherwise unrestrained Kyra (the eponymous Goth Girl) has issues with the f-word.
  • "I WANT DOMINGO MONTOYA, YOU SON OF A BITCH!"
  • In Crysis: Legion, normally mild Dr. Gould decides that the best analogy to describe the Nanosuit's intended purpose against the Ceph is gay rape on hanging flies. Everyone in the vicinity, even the wounded, is Dumb Struck.
  • In the 4th Kingdom Keepers novel, Wayne says "Damn" while demanding to check if Maleficent has escaped her cell at the end of the book. This is coming from a novel where no curse has ever before been written and rarely implied and "OMG" is stated out loud in place of the more blasphemous alternative.
  • Sylvia Plath's eloquent, haunting poem "Daddy" ends with "Daddy, you bastard, I'm through."
  • In Marilyn French's The Women's Room, Mira - in contrast to other members of the group - swears so little that the group find it hilarious when she tells them to 'go fuck themselves', which she sees as passing a sort of initiation test. Ben realizes just how angry Mira is with him when she screams, "FUCK OFF, BEN!"
  • An Elegy for the Still-living contains a few.
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 Masoch: Piss and fuck. Wade in muck. Death.

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  • Xenocide (from the Ender's Game series) by Orson Scott Card has a select few swears, particularly a conversation between Miro and Jane.
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 Miro: I thought you were my friend.

Jane: I am. I can read your mind.

Miro: You're a meddling old bitch and you can't read anything.

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  • In Septimus Heap, in Syren, when Septimus is trying to get a Sealed door open to rescue people trapped behind it:
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 Septimus: I'll have to do a reverse ... not so easy without a Darke talisman. Rats

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  • Captain Armand Pahner's every word is precision strike, so whenever he does swear, it is fucking surgical. And you know the fecal matter has most definitely hit the pneumatic impeller.
  • In the Stephen King novella The Body (later filmed as Stand by Me) 13-year-old Gordie is neglected by his parents, who are lost in a fog of grief since his brother died. One day his mother is dreamily reminiscing about the brother on a day when Gordie's been through some severe stuff and his response is, "Yeah, that's a real bitch." His mother doesn't notice.
  • The Great Gatsby: Owl-eyed man's funeral oration briefly conveys Gatsby's sad life and death.
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  "The poor son-of-a-bitch," he said.

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  • Man's Search for Meaning details a psychiatrist's experiences in a Nazi concentration camp, where a fellow prisoner's exclamation of "Shit!" when he hopes to hold on to his manuscript is both unexpected in the tone of the narration to date and explicitly sets the demarcation between his old life and his life behind the fence.