Supposedly the fine was not true and the Production Code (censors at the time) made "hell" and "damn" ok in certain circumstances. The movie was "Gone with the Wind."
Ha!
where was the speaker when he or she uttered these words.
Uttered by the three witches in 'Macbeth'.
That is your misfortune
Jack Nicholson
The term "expletive" usually refers to a bad word, often called a "swear" or a "curse" word. In many newspapers & magazines, there are codes that do not permit bad language (like the swear word that begins with F, jokingly called the "F-bomb") to be written, since seeing bad language supposedly might offend someone, or set a bad example for young people. Thus, newspapers will use a euphemism (a polite way of saying something vulgar), or they will just say the person "uttered an expletive."
The word "uttered" has two syllables.
The farmer yanked on the cow's uttered to get some milk
I uttered during the problem because i was nervous!
A few synonyms for uttered include: Said Stated Voiced Spoke Expressed
The palpable silence in the room erupted into joyous glee when the king uttered his fateful decree.
It depends on how something was uttered. Uttered, whispered, yelled, requested, replied.
It depends on how something was uttered. Uttered, whispered, yelled, requested, replied.
The past participle of "utter" is "uttered."
Utter
Being mad is never uttered; it is shown and manifested. anger can be better said and uttered.
uttered