Word Play: Puns, Spoonerisms, &
Malapropisms
|
|
|
Magazine Index
|
|
|
|
|
| #2 Spoonerism -
"William A. Spooner [died 1930, English clergyman & educator] First appeared 1900
- a transposition of usually initial sounds of two or more words" |
Example of a spoonerism: Saying "tons of soil" for "sons of toil". Another famous spoonerism (to my family, at least) is the joke about a baseball pitcher by the name of Mel Famey who drank too many beers before pitching the game. Punch line, "It was the beer that made Mel Famey walk us." (The beer that made Milwaukee famous.) And there's another joke about a piano tuner by the name of "Oburnokity" who would only tune a piano once. When asked why, he said, "Oburnokity only tunes once." #3 Malapropism - "The usually UNINTENTIONALLY humorous misuse or distortion of a word or phrase; especially, the use of a word sounding somewhat like the one intended but ludicrously wrong in the context" From a web site about malapropisms called Conan the Grammarian: "Mrs. Malaprop, for whom these misused words are named, was the leading lady in Richard Sheridan's 'The Rivals,' a late eighteenth-century play about a lady whose husband came into some money and who was thrust into the uppercrud of society. Mrs. Malaprop did not want to seem out of place, so she simply used big words to appear genteel. Malapropisms are in the same class as spoonerisms and puns, but are not for the feint of heart." Examples of malapropism (quoted from another web site): The man is an idiom. He wears shoes made of stimulated alligator. I resemble that remark! We had a 15 inch erotic house plant in our living room. I need the afternoon off to attend my brother's consummation. That's a mute point. So, I hope you all enjoyed these! And may your speech and writing be fiddled with run. I mean riddled with fun. And may you enjoy your next erotic vacation, oops, I mean exotic vacation on an island in the Pacific. Geesh!
|
||||||||||||||