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Science reveals benefits to 'sounding like a sailor'


Science reveals benefits to sounding like a sailor
Stacy Liberatore For Dailymail.com
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Being told you curse like a sailor is usually not a compliment, but scientists who have studied swearing for decades say using foul language is actually beneficial.
Numerous studies have found using taboo words may be a sign of intelligence, honesty and creativity, as well as a way to withstand pain.
Although swearing has been deemed language of poverty, researchers found well-educated people are better at coming up with curse words than those with a smaller vocabulary.
Profanity has also been linked to honesty and creativity, as people choose such powerful words to express their emotions and when doing so an area of the right brain is activated, which is known as the creative brain. ....

New York , United States , Timothy Jay , Emma Byrne , Keele University School Of Psychology , Massachusetts College Of Liberal Arts , New York Times , Southern Connecticut State University , Daily Mail Mailonline , Massachusetts College , Liberal Arts , Daily Mail Being , Big Five , Swearing Is Good , Keele University , புதியது யார்க் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , தீமோத்தேயு ஜெய் , எம்மா பெயரனே , கீல் பல்கலைக்கழகம் பள்ளி ஆஃப் உளவியல் , மாசசூசெட்ஸ் கல்லூரி ஆஃப் தாராளவாத கலைகள் , புதியது யார்க் முறை , தெற்கு கனெக்டிகட் நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மாசசூசெட்ஸ் கல்லூரி , தாராளவாத கலைகள் , தினசரி அஞ்சல் இருப்பது ,

Heart health of the fat-but-fit worse than normal weight nonexercisers


Heart health of the fat-but-fit worse than normal weight nonexercisers
Ian Randall For Mailonline
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Being fat but fit typically leads to worse heart health than being normal weight and getting no exercise, a study has warned.
Experts from Spain analysed health data on more than 520,000 adults and found that exercise does help reduce the risk of developing hypertension and diabetes.
However, they concluded, being overweight leads to a significantly higher risk of having both a heart attack or a stroke. 
In fact, the team added, those who were active and obese were around twice as likely to have high cholesterol than inactive, normal weight people. ....

Alejandro Lucia , European University , World Health Organisation , Daily Mail Mailonline , Daily Mail Being , European Journal , அலெஜாண்ட்ரா லூசியா , ஐரோப்பிய பல்கலைக்கழகம் , உலகம் ஆரோக்கியம் ஆர்கநைஸேஶந் , தினசரி அஞ்சல் இருப்பது , ஐரோப்பிய இதழ் ,