Skip to main content

Swearport Android app helps make you an international potty mouth

Swearport-Android-app-helps-make-you-an-international-potty-mouth
Image used with permission by copyright holder

With the holidays behind us and Santa unlikely to check his Naughty or Nice list well into the upcoming New Year, now is the perfect time to unleash that suppressed vulgarity you may have built up inside you over the holidays with some choice phrases and expletives.

Of course, if you’re feeling particularly offensive, swearing in your native tongue generally isn’t all that impressive. But with the help of the Android Marketplace’s latest app Swearport  you’ll be spouting off curses in languages you didn’t even know existed.

Recommended Videos

Swearport-Amharic-ListNot content with simply giving you a swear word in one of over 50 languages, Swearport also provides you with high quality audio recordings of each bad word from a native speaker as well as detailed information about its pronunciation, meaning, what its English equivalent would be, and finally, intensity rating out of five. You know, for those that truly want to delve into the art of international swearing – which is probably a good thing because it’s certainly important to know what you’re saying before you say it.

We can definitely see many a black eye stemming from Swearport more than all of the other apps on the Android Marketplace, which is why we recommend trying this app with friends, loved ones, or from the safety of an automobile speeding in the other direction of your potential verbal victim. And don’t blame us if you receive a lump of coal under the tree or in your stocking next year.

[Warning NSFW, the video below contains offensive words in many different languages . It is an app to help you swear after all.]

Amir Iliaifar
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Associate Automotive Section Editor for Digital Trends, Amir Iliaifar covers the ever increasing cross-section between tech…
Your Gmail app will soon help protect you from scams
Moto G 5G (2024) in Sage Green showing Gmail.

Email scams are nothing new. The old Nigerian prince con has been around long enough that it's become a meme, but more modern scams can be a lot harder to pick out. According to statistics, nearly 3.4 billion phishing emails are sent per day. Gmail will soon implement a feature on its mobile platform that puts a checkmark beside verified senders to help users tell what's legit — and what possibly isn't — at a glance.

The feature already exists on the Gmail desktop website, but with over half of all users accessing their Gmail accounts from a mobile app, it's a welcome addition. It utilizes a standard called Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI) and a Verified Mark Certificate (VMC). If an email contains these marks, it's highly unlikely they come from a malicious source.

Read more
How to use Google’s Gemini AI app on your Android phone or iPhone
How to use Gemini on your Android.based device.

Google Gemini is a powerful AI assistant that can help you with a variety of tasks, from writing and brainstorming to learning and finding information. It’s designed to be a versatile and helpful tool that can enhance your productivity and creativity.

Read more
Does your Duolingo app icon look sick? You’re not alone
The Duolingo app icon, showing a sick-looking version of the Duolingo owl.

It's an absolute tragedy: The normally chipper Duolingo owl has fallen ill.

Just kidding. The app icon might have changed, but it doesn't mean any significant changes are coming to the app. It did stir up quite a bit of conversation on both X (formerly Twitter) and Reddit, though, as users around the world noticed that the Duo owl looked like he needed a heavy dose of DayQuil.

Read more