Almost one-billion f-words were tweeted, posted, commented, shared and blogged across the internet in 2016, a new study has found.

Analysis carried out on the language used across the internet found the word 'f**k' was used 946,158,697 times this year.

Breaking those numbers down means an average of 2,613,698 'f**ks' were given every day this year, according to the data compiled by HotWire PR's Paul Stollery.

But in a year that saw the internet filled with almost one-billion f-words, one day stood out above all others.

Almost one-billion f-words were tweeted, posted, commented, shared and blogged across the internet in 2016, a new study has found

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

On that fateful day, a staggering 7,638,384 f-words were shouted into the internet abyss - almost three times the daily average for the rest of the year.

It's safe to assume many probably came from the 65,844,954 million people who voted for Hillary Clinton, as well as the Democratic candidate herself.

Incredibly, the day stands on its own without a competition for the most expletive-inducing 24 hours of the year.

The most were shared online on November 9 - the day after Donald trump won the election

This word cloud shows which words were used most with 'f**k' on the day. Donald Trump was second, beaten out by 'local hotties'

The second sweariest day, February 4, saw a comparatively paltry 3,518,781 'f-bombs' dropped.

Some of the headline-grabbing, and potentially swear word-drawing, events of the day were: President Obama calling for an end to anti-Muslim rhetoric, a judge ruled Bill Cosby could stand trial, and Rand Paul and Rick Santorum dropped out of the presidential race.

The data also broke down which words were most associated with 'f**k' on November 9.

Surprising, 'Donald Trump' finished second on the list, ahead of other words such as: 'Jesus', 'Hillary', 'Obama', and 'Andrew'.

However, the number one phrase linked to the f-word on November 9 was: 'local hotties'.

The online anger against Trump was seen on the streets, with about 10,000 demonstrators marching in Manhattan on November 9 before they and converged outside Trump Tower

Donald Trump flanked by members of his family speaks to supporters during election night at the New York Hilton Midtown in New York

The study also found women were slightly more sweary than men, with 58 per cent of the identified posts coming from female users compared to males.

Stollery said he tracked all uses of the f-word on: 'Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, blogs, comments, forums and in the news using a tool called Netbase'.

But he added his number might still be low.

'Different channels offer differing amounts of accuracy and reliability: Twitter and Tumblr are both really reliable as they’re robust as well as open, whereas data from channels like Facebook is incomplete due to the fact that most posts are private,' he wrote.

'Instagram’s data was sketchy and I’m always skeptical of news tracking on Netbase as it’s primarily designed for social media tracking.'