When was the last time you caught yourself using words that hurt someone else?
Were you aware at the time of why you used them?
Or were you just saying something you thought was funny?
For that matter, why do we ever use hurtful words to describe someone?
Maybe we take some pleasure in finding a particularly apt insult for someone who has wronged us.
And we enjoy feeling superior, even a little bit, to someone who has made us feel smaller, less important, or less intelligent.
So, we say something to âput them in their place.â
- Because it makes us feel more powerful
- Because it addresses an injustice
- Because we see the other person as a bully or a monster
- Because weâre hurting, and we want the other person to hurt, too
But instead of making us feel better, those offensive words and expressions, whenever they come to mind, only serve to keep us angry or on the defensive, prolonging the pain and keeping us stuck in the past.
Sometimes, though, we use offensive words without even realizing it.
You can probably think of a list of hurtful words and phrases that have become the go-to expressions of people youâve met.
And you want to tell them, âIt is not okay to say that!â
But then you wonder what you might be saying â without intending to harm anyone â that others find offensive or controversial.
Whatâs in this post:
- 31 Hurtful Words to Completely Avoid
- 1. âGayâ
- 2. âYou ____ like a girl.â
- 3. âRetardedâ
- 4. âN*gger / N*ggaâ
- 5. âYou sound like one of those bleeding-heart liberals.â
- 6. âIt was just a joke.â
- 7. âI feel so bipolar today.â
- 8. âIâm a little OCD.â
- 9. âYouâre such a drama queen.â
- 10. âThis makes me want to kill myself.â
- 11. âIs it that time of the month?â
- 12. âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
- 13. âMidgetâ
- 14. âNaziâ (like âGrammar Naziâ or âFeminaziâ)
- 15. âDonât be so antisocial.â
- 16. âI donât care.â
- 17. âHave you been living under a rock?â
- 18. âThatâs dumb.â
- 19. âYouâre a fool.â
- 20. âWhatâs it like to be a failure?â
- 21. âYouâre in my way.â
- 22. âGrow a pair.â
- 23. âI hate that about you.â
- 24. âIâm disappointed in you.â
- 25. âItâs all in your head.â
- 26. âYouâre boring.â
- 27. âYouâre useless.â
- 28. âYouâre ugly when youâre angry.â
- 29. âWhy do you have to be such a b*tch?â
- 30. âOh, are you triggered?â
- 31. âI feel so fat right now.â
31 Hurtful Words to Completely Avoid
Weâve compiled a list of 31 offensive or controversial words or expressions that are best avoided â even if youâre âonly kidding.â
1. âGayâ
Dismissing someone or something as âgayâ is an insult to anyone with a homosexual orientation, because youâre essentially using the word âgayâ to mean âbadâ or to refer to something you donât like.
Itâs no less insulting or mean-spirited than if you were to use a slur to directly attack someone who identifies as homosexual. And no one who points that out is overreacting or being âoversensitive.â
2. âYou ____ like a girl.â
The reason why this phrase deserves to die is its implied message that women are weaker than men.
And while men generally build bulky muscle more readily than women, the testosterone responsible for that doesnât make them stronger where it really counts.
3. âRetardedâ
The words âmentally retardedâ were once commonly used to refer to people with a below-average IQ, either because of a congenital condition like Down Syndrome or because of a brain injury.
The connotation is never positive, and there are plenty who use it deliberately as a cheap and easy way to tear someone else down.
4. âN*gger / N*ggaâ
It is never okay for a non-African-American person to use this word. Ever.
I donât care if you feel like youâve earned the right to use that word as a playful tease. This word has a poisonous history, and it has nothing to do with humor or friendship. Avoid it.
5. âYou sound like one of those bleeding-heart liberals.â
This polarizing expression is still used as a way to dismiss those who argue for any cause that someone who identifies as âsocially liberalâ might support â as if compassion invalidated someoneâs beliefs.
Itâs a bigoted response to anything that doesnât line up with someoneâs narrow idea of what it means to be an American Christian.
6. âIt was just a joke.â
This expression is meant to brush off someone elseâs response to an offensive remark.
Itâs similar to âI was only kidding,â and is meant to deflect attention from the one who made the offensive statement and point to the one complaining as âsomeone who canât take a joke.â
Follow-up phrases include âIâm sorry you were offended by that,â or âIâm sorry, butâŠâ â neither of which qualify as a genuine apology.
7. âI feel so bipolar today.â
Bipolar disorder isnât a joke. Itâs a real, diagnosable mental health disorder, and those who live with it arenât just bipolar on certain days.
If you feel manic or you feel depressed on a particular day, itâs okay to acknowledge that. Just donât confuse it with being bipolar.
8. âIâm a little OCD.â
Hereâs another real psychiatric disorder that shouldnât be made light of. You can be anal about details and not OCD. You can like for things to be perfectly in order and not be OCD.
Related: Why People Are So Mean And How To Deal With Them
What distinguishes OCD from ordinary attention to detail are the three words that make up the acronym: obsessive, compulsive, and disorder.
You do things that other people consider anal, paranoid, or ridiculous because you cannot NOT do them.
9. âYouâre such a drama queen.â
The assumption behind this statement is that the other person is overreacting to something â or that the other person âjust loves dramaâ or wants attention.
Itâs likely that thereâs something going on with that person that hasnât yet been addressed. Their apparent need for drama is their way of crying out for attention to something that has been ignored for too long.
10. âThis makes me want to kill myself.â
You donât know whether anyone who hears these words has ever been suicidal or has suffered as a result of a suicide, so itâs best not to use language like this.
It could remind them of that pain and possibly lead them back to the same torturing thought-emotion loop. If youâve experienced that yourself, you probably donât wish it on anyone else.
11. âIs it that time of the month?â
It says a lot â and nothing good âabout a guy who would immediately jump to this insulting conclusion.
It suggests that only a woman who is being adversely affected by her female hormones during a particularly âhormonalâ time of the month would dare be otherwise than docile and agreeable.
12. âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
A more common variant is âShe doesnât know what sheâs talking about,â since these words are often spoken by a male to discredit a female who isnât in the room and therefore cannot (immediately) defend herself.
Related: 12 Of The Worst Negative Personality Traits That Are Truly Nasty
Itâs the easy recourse of a coward who feels perfectly comfortable arrogantly dismissing the words of someone who isnât there to challenge him.
13. âMidgetâ
Those born with dwarfism or with any condition that limits their physical stature do not, as a rule, choose to be called âmidgets.â
The words âdwarfâ and âlittle personâ are more acceptable, as long as they arenât used with a condescending or dismissive tone. But âmidgetâ is inaccurate, insulting, and never okay.
14. âNaziâ (like âGrammar Naziâ or âFeminaziâ)
Regardless of how rigid someone might be with regard to grammar rules or political ideologies, itâs not okay to dismiss them as a âNazi,â as though their rigidity or attention to detail made them soulless or evil.
15. âDonât be so antisocial.â
True antisocial behavior is more typical of sociopaths and psychopaths â not introverts in general â and itâs nothing to make light of.
Introverted does not mean antisocial. Introverts know this, and so do those who know them.
Yet even we introverts will sometimes refer to ourselves as âantisocialâ when describing our behavior at social gatherings or our level of social energy at a particular moment.
16. âI donât care.â
Youâve probably seen someone stop another personâs talking by putting a hand up to their face, as if to say, âTalk to the hand.â Itâs a rude and dismissive way of saying, âI donât care about what youâre saying.â
Unless you want to risk having your hand grabbed (and possibly broken) by someone whoâs had enough of that attitude, find a kinder way to let the other person know you canât give them your full attention just then.
17. âHave you been living under a rock?â
This question basically means, âHow are you so ignorant?â It attacks the other person for not knowing as much about a particular thing as we do.
And it assumes their relative ignorance justifies an insult on their character or intelligence.
Instead of doing that, we could just give the other person the benefit of the doubt and kindly offer them a brief summary of the story behind the point weâre trying to make.
18. âThatâs dumb.â
Dismissing someone elseâs idea or thoughts with these words is hurtful and offensive. It shouldnât be hard to realize this since no one wants to be told their ideas are âdumb.â
19. âYouâre a fool.â
This word had an even stronger negative connotation than âdumb.â
Even smart people can have dumb ideas, but once you dismiss someone as a fool, youâre essentially saying they have nothing of value to say â about anything.
20. âWhatâs it like to be a failure?â
While weâre alive, weâre likely to experience failure or success, as long as weâre still doing things and striving to reach our goals.
If someone never fails, it probably means theyâre not doing enough. Or theyâre playing it safe.
No one is defined by their failures, however impressive they might be. Neither does it make sense to call someone a success based on successes that donât ultimately define them.
21. âYouâre in my way.â
Designating someone as an obstacle or a hindrance to your getting something you want is dehumanizing and offensive.
It implies that you see that person as nothing more than an object blocking the path to your goal â which you see as more valuable than that person.
22. âGrow a pair.â
Itâs similar to âGrow a spineâ but more insulting â particularly to men. It implies that the man doesnât have the courage to do something he ought to do and that therefore heâs less of a man.
Men or women might use this expression to goad another man into doing something they want him to do, whether itâs in his best interests or not.
23. âI hate that about you.â
Decidedly more personal than âYou know what I hate?â this immediately puts the other person on the defensive.
The word âhateâ is so strong, it immediately creates a negatively-charged atmosphere, which is toxic to everyone in it.
24. âIâm disappointed in you.â
Some of the people who use these expressions seem to think theyâre doing others a favor by letting them know how theyâre falling short.
But itâs not a favor to remind someone of how they continue to disappoint your expectations of them, however reasonable you think those are.
Ultimately, if your expectations donât match theirs, theyâll only act as a barrier.
25. âItâs all in your head.â
Some people are particularly sensitive to the messages their body is sending them.
They know something is wrong, but they donât know what. And according to every test the doctor runs, thereâs ânothing clinically wrong.â
Most doctors are too busy addressing emergencies to devote much attention to non-emergency mystery illnesses.
But the expression, âItâs all in your head,â shouldnât be used when thereâs still a possibility (however remote) that the complaint is due to a real health problem.
26. âYouâre boring.â
Essentially, youâre telling the other person you donât find their company or conversation stimulating.
And rather than suggest ways to have fun together, you decide to make sure they know how bored you are â and how itâs their fault.
If whatâs fun for you isnât fun for the other person (and vice-versa), itâs okay to be honest about this and either separate or do things separately.
27. âYouâre useless.â
Using this insult essentially means you see the other personâs value as synonymous with their usefulness to you.
When someone dismisses another human being as âuseless,â the intention is to make them feel worthless â as if their death would do the world a bigger favor than their continued existence.
28. âYouâre ugly when youâre angry.â
This expression is used most often by males who think that a womanâs appearance is worth more to her than respect for her intelligence and autonomy.
Itâs a total jerk move, and while it can be infuriating (because of the condescending attitude behind it), it also reveals the poverty of wit on the side of the person using it.
29. âWhy do you have to be such a b*tch?â
This is another popular phrase among men looking for an easy way to deflect attention from their defects of character and try to blame the woman whose behavior is provoking him.
Using this line only exposes the manâs powerlessness in the face of a woman who wonât allow him to control, manipulate, or silence her.
30. âOh, are you triggered?â
Too many have used this expression to invalidate the feelings of others by implying that the âtriggeredâ one is overreacting to a prank or offensive remark.
Using the word âtriggered,â though, is insensitive to those who struggle with a real mental illness or with deep, emotional trauma.
31. âI feel so fat right now.â
If youâre feeling bloated, gassy, or just overly full, you can just say that. Most people know how that feels.
But using the word âfatâ is insulting â especially to anyone in the room who is carrying even a little more weight than you are. Fat-shaming is never appropriate â even when you think youâre only insulting yourself.
Donât pretend your feeling of fullness after that chimichanga gives you the right to call yourself âfatâ as an expression of solidarity, either. It doesnât work.
Are there hurtful words youâd add to the list?
Now that you know 31 words and expressions that everyone should avoid, I bet you can think of others you could add to the list.
You already know words can hurt, even when someone is âjust teasingâ or when the alcohol is wreaking havoc on peopleâs filters.
And maybe youâve felt called out, shamed, or devalued by someone elseâs thoughtless remarks.
Once youâve been on the receiving end, you have a better understanding of how powerful words can be â both to build people up and to tear them down.,
Letâs use that power for good.
And may your thoughtfulness and compassion influence everything you do today.