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- Path: sparky!uunet!UB.com!daver!sgiblab!spool.mu.edu!agate!econ!jeff
- From: jeff@econBerkeley.EDU (Jeffrey C. Ely)
- Newsgroups: alt.quotations
- Subject: Spoonerisms!
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 19:20:27 GMT
- Organization: Econometrics Laboratory, U. C. Berkeley
- Lines: 43
- Sender: jeff@econ (Jeffrey C. Ely)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1k9blr$r8v@agate.berkeley.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: emily4.berkeley.edu
-
- A Spoonerism is a form of malapropism, a transposition of words or
- syllables in a sentence or phrase. The defining characteristic of a Spoonerism
- is that the transposed version has a meaning of its own and that meaning can
- be related in some way to the meaning of the original version.
-
- Example:
-
- What is the difference between a tribe of pygmies and the women's marathon team?
-
- Answer: One is a bunch of cunning runts....
-
- Actually, the form "What is the difference between..." is considered a low-
- rent form of Spoonerism since it violates an important criterion for a good
- transposition pun. That is that the two versions should be easily relateable
- within the context of the joke. The "What is the difference between..."
- form is usually used only because there is no natural way to do this, and thus
- the pun loses some of its elegance.
-
- The nice thing about Spoonerisms is that once you start to get the hang of
- them, its easy to come up with your own. In fact it can be quite addicting.
- At the height of my spoonerism craze, I found myself reprocessing every sentence
- I heard, searching for a Spoonerism. If you're good at it, you'll be amazed
- ar how common they are, and you can really annoy your friends in conversation!
-
- Here is the first Spoonerism I ever created. it still holds a special place
- in my heart:
-
- A young man was distressed that due to the recent blizzard, the highway
- had been closed down, and he would be unable to drive home and have his
- evening nap before attending the opera. Staring down at his new loafers
- which were bound to be ruined in his walk to the theatre, he thought to
- himself glumly," Well, I guess I'll just have to take my snooze through the
- show."
-
- By the way, the definitive reference on Sponnerisms is a book called
- Cruel and Unusual Puns by Hauptman (can't remember the first name).
-
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++|+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
- Jeff Ely | "He said the Sun's not yellow...
- Department of Economics | It's Chicken!"
- UC Berkeley |
- jeff@econ.berkeley.edu |
-
-