I'm a big fan of how Calvin Coolidge was. He spoke soft and when he did speak, it was worth listening to. Littering something precious like a voice with profanity is unfortunate.
Well yeah, that too; I totally agree.
Few things cheapen a person more than language as used by the Bostonian Drunkard.
But on the other hand, I'm human, and sometimes slip. But fortunately in real life, I know Tudor and Elizabethan curse-words--and there were some appalling ones, back in the 1500s--and the exact ways those words were pronounced (teaching me to speak 16th-century English was a method of speech therapy used on me).
So I use those cuss-words (in real life) instead, and since they sound so unlike anything else most people have ever heard, they have no idea what I'm
really saying.