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- Path: sparky!uunet!srvr1.engin.umich.edu!uvaarpa!murdoch!poe.acc.Virginia.EDU!daj8m
- From: daj8m@poe.acc.Virginia.EDU (Deirdre A. Johnson)
- Subject: Re: Question - what's the word for ...
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.193800.2944@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- Sender: usenet@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU
- Organization: University of Virginia
- References: <1993Jan17.104721.908696@locus.com>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 19:38:00 GMT
- Lines: 27
-
- Hi! Another lurker comes out of the woodwork! This is my first
- posting to this group. I've enjoyed reading other people's contributions,
- but I've been too timid to say anything myself - until now!
- I just have to answer Dave Daulton's question...
-
- Yes, Dave! The word is spoonerism. Named for one Cardinal Spooner, a dean
- at Oxford in the time of Queen Victoria, who was famous for mixing up
- initial consonants of adjacent words. For example:
-
- 1. (During a sermon) "What one of us has not harboured in his heart
- a half-warmed fish...?"
-
- 2. (When Queen Victoria came to visit) "Let's all stand up and give
- three cheers for the queer old dean!"
-
- 3. (Dressing down an un-studious student) "Sir! You have tasted two
- entire worms! You have hissed all my mystery lectures and attempted
- to fight a liar in the quad! You must leave Oxford by the next
- town drain!"
-
- And those are all the spoonerisms I can think of offhand. Hope you
- like them!
-
- -Deirdre (daj8m@Virginia.edu)
-
- P.S. I know my last example doesn't quite fit the definition I gave, but
- it is my all-time favorite - I just had to put it in!
-