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🇬🇷 Ελληνικά · profanity etymology

Greek Swear Words: Meanings, Pronunciation, and Context

Greek swear words explained with pronunciation, literal meaning, cultural context, severity, origin notes, and safer alternatives.

Greek profanity is expressive, emotional, and often built from sex, family, religion, stupidity, and blunt commands.

Cultural pattern

Many Greek insults sound theatrical in translation, but direct family or sexual formulas can be very serious in real use.

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Meanings, pronunciation, and origins

μαλάκας / malakasσκατά / skataάντε γαμήσου / ante gamisouβλάκας / vlakas
Term
Pronunciation
Meaning
Severity

μαλάκας / malakas

Literal: wanker
mah-LAH-kahs
Idiot, jerk, dude, or fool depending on relationship and tone.
strongBody/sex
Origin note

Built from a sexual slang root; modern Greek uses it broadly from friendly address to insult.

Real-world context

Common in casual speech, but risky for learners.

Safer alternative

φίλε

σκατά / skata

Literal: shit
skah-TAH
Shit, crap, something bad.
mediumWaste
Origin note

A basic scatological word used literally and as an exclamation.

Real-world context

Informal and vulgar.

Safer alternative

χάλια

άντε γαμήσου / ante gamisou

Literal: go fuck yourself
AHN-deh ghah-MEE-soo
Fuck off / go to hell.
nuclearDismissals
Origin note

A direct imperative built from a sexual verb; highly confrontational.

Real-world context

Avoid direct use outside fiction or quoting.

Safer alternative

άσε με ήσυχο

βλάκας / vlakas

Literal: fool
VLAH-kahs
Idiot, stupid person.
mediumBody/sex
Origin note

A common insult for foolishness rather than an obscene term.

Real-world context

Rude, but much less taboo than sexual curses.

Safer alternative

απρόσεκτος

Use this like a learner, not a weapon

Profanity is context-loaded. The goal is to understand films, street speech, jokes, and arguments, then choose whether a cleaner line gets the same result with less damage.

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FAQ

Is “malakas” always offensive?

No. It can be friendly among close speakers, but learners should treat it as risky because tone changes everything.

What is a safer Greek way to say “leave me alone”?

“Άσε με ήσυχο” means “leave me in peace” and avoids direct profanity.

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