Originally posted by fffreeze220
Foreign language doesnt help not getting mutet
Depends on how foreign the language is; there are enough cognates from German to English to allow an English speaker to get a fair idea of whether a German term is a vulgarity -- 'arschloch', for example. Languages that are less common, or which are linguistically further from English, would be harder for an English speaker to catch. For example, calling someone a 'zalupu konskaya' or telling them 'tebya ne ebut, ti ne podmakhivay', or describing them as 'baltattsya kak govno v prorubi' would be much less likely to be caught, even though they're all vulgarities.
And if you go further afield, there are a number of science fiction and fantasy authors that have put enough work into creating languages for their worlds that they have created vulgarities in them, which would be unintelligible to someone else unless they'd read the books. For example, calling someone a 'shendi-fleckin, shidoni-be-shayed lorsh' won't be understood by someone who hasn't read Jacqueline Lichtenberg's Sime/Gen stories. Other fictional languages would be more recognizable; for example, calling someone a 'petaQ' or 'k'pekt' or exclaiming 'Qu'vatlh!' or 'QI'yaH!' would be recognizable to someone familiar with Star Trek as being Klingon vulgarities.
So if you want to be vulgar on the radio, you just need to be more inventive about it.