Study finds November 9 was the day with the most 'f-words' used online

Nearly one-billion f-words had been tweeted, posted, commented, shared and blogged throughout the web in 2016, a brand new examine has discovered. 

Evaluation carried out on the language used throughout the web discovered the phrase 'f**okay' was used 946,158,697 instances this 12 months. 

Breaking these numbers down means a mean of two,613,698 'f**ks' got day by day this 12 months, in keeping with the information compiled by HotWire PR's Paul Stollery.

However in a 12 months that noticed the web crammed with virtually one-billion f-words, sooner or later stood out above all others.

Nearly one-billion f-words had been tweeted, posted, commented, shared and blogged throughout the web in 2016, a brand new examine has discovered

November 9 - the day after Donald Trump's election win.

On that fateful day, a staggering 7,638,384 f-words had been shouted into the web abyss - virtually 3 times the every day common for the remainder of the 12 months. 

It is secure to imagine many in all probability got here from the 65,844,954 million individuals who voted for Hillary Clinton, in addition to the Democratic candidate herself.

Extremely, the day stands by itself with no competitors for essentially the most expletive-inducing 24 hours of the 12 months. 

Probably the most had been shared on-line on November 9 - the day after Donald trump received the election

This phrase cloud exhibits which phrases had been used most with 'f**okay' on the day. Donald Trump was second, crushed out by 'native hotties'

The second sweariest day, February four, noticed a relatively paltry three,518,781 'f-bombs' dropped.

A few of the headline-grabbing, and probably swear word-drawing, occasions of the day had been: President Obama calling for an finish to anti-Muslim rhetoric, a choose dominated Invoice Cosby may stand trial, and Rand Paul and Rick Santorum dropped out of the presidential race.  

The information additionally broke down which phrases had been most related to 'f**okay' on November 9.

Shocking, 'Donald Trump' completed second on the listing, forward of different phrases similar to: 'Jesus', 'Hillary', 'Obama', and 'Andrew'.

Nevertheless, the primary phrase linked to the f-word on November 9 was: 'native hotties'. 

The net anger in opposition to Trump was seen on the streets, with about 10,000 demonstrators marching in Manhattan on November 9 earlier than they and converged exterior Trump Tower

Donald Trump flanked by members of his household speaks to supporters throughout election evening on the New York Hilton Midtown in New York

The examine additionally discovered girls had been barely extra sweary than males, with 58 per cent of the recognized posts coming from feminine customers in comparison with males.

Stollery mentioned he tracked all makes use of of the f-word on: 'Twitter, Fb, Instagram, YouTube, blogs, feedback, boards and within the information utilizing a instrument known as Netbase'.

However he added his quantity would possibly nonetheless be low.

'Completely different channels provide differing quantities of accuracy and reliability: Twitter and Tumblr are each actually dependable as they're sturdy in addition to open, whereas knowledge from channels like Fb is incomplete because of the truth that most posts are personal,' he wrote. 

'Instagram's knowledge was sketchy and I'm all the time skeptical of reports monitoring on Netbase because it's primarily designed for social media monitoring.'

However he did really feel the abundance of cursing over the previous 364 days, 'painted an correct image of the 12 months.'

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