Cuss: Map of profane words to a rating of sureness

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Map of profanities, slurs, and obscenities to a sureness rating.

This package exposes lists of profane words in several languages. This rating does not represent how vulgar a term is. It represents how likely it is to be used as either profanity or clean text.

Use this for researching natural language. Don’t use it to make a “profanity filter”. Those are bad.

This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 14.14+, 16.0+), install with npm:

In Deno with esm.sh:

import {cuss} from 'https://esm.sh/cuss@2'

In browsers with esm.sh:

<script type="module"> import {cuss} from 'https://esm.sh/cuss@2?bundle' </script>
import {cuss} from 'cuss' import {cuss as cussPt} from 'cuss/pt' console.log(Object.keys(cuss).length) // 1776 console.log(Object.keys(cussPt).length) // 173 console.log(cuss.beaver) // 0 console.log(cuss.asshat) // 2 console.log(cussPt.burro) // 1 console.log(cussPt.bixa) // 2

cuss exports the following entries:

  • cuss — English
  • cuss/ar-latn — Arabic (Latin)
  • cuss/es — Spanish
  • cuss/fr — French
  • cuss/it — Italian
  • cuss/pt — Portuguese
  • cuss/pt-pt — European Portuguese

Each entry exports the identifier cuss. There are no default exports.

Map of offensive words to a sureness rating (Record<string, number>).

Each rating is a number between 0 and 2 (both including), representing the certainty the key is used as a profanity depending on context.

Rating Use as a profanity Use in clean text Example
2 likely unlikely asshat
1 maybe maybe addict
0 unlikely likely beaver

This package is fully typed with TypeScript. It exports no additional types.

This package is at least compatible with all maintained versions of Node.js. As of now, that is Node.js 14.14+ and 16.0+. It also works in Deno and modern browsers.

  • buzzwords — list of buzzwords
  • dale-chall — list of familiar American-English words (1995)
  • fillers — list of filler words
  • hedges — list of hedge words
  • profanities — list of the same profane words, but without the sureness
  • spache — list of simple American-English words (1974)
  • weasels — list of weasel words

Yes please! See How to Contribute to Open Source.

New terms can be added to the corresponding files as listed in the support section.

To add a new language, create a new JS file with a BCP 47 language tag as its name (lower case, dashes, and preferred and normalized).

After changing something, run npm install to install all required dependencies, then npm test to update: the project includes some scripts to make sure everything is in order. Note that the tests require Node.js 18.0+. Finally, open a pull request.

This package is safe.

MIT © Titus Wormer

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