Showing posts with label wordplay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wordplay. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

For the Love of Math and Language

mathematical limerick by Leigh Mercer - 
mercer limerick
To be read as:

A dozen, a gross, and a score
Plus three times the square root of four
Divided by seven
Plus five times eleven
Is nine squared and not a bit more.

Mercer is most well known for creating the classic palindrome “A man, a plan, a canal — Panama!”.

Spotted at Futility Closet.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Pronouns Playing with Plurals

I couldn't resist throwing a bit of alliteration into the title for the added wordplay effect.


Thank you, Steve, for bringing this comic to my attention.

Comic by Jesse Tahirali.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Wine and Wordplay




Thank you to 22 Words for bringing this video to my attention.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Sounds Like ... Word Spoonerism



What a profound way of switching sounds and words around to create a clever and appropriate advertisement.

This is just one ad from the new campaign but it is certainly my favorite.

I love the way the verb and adverb from the original proverb play with each other to become a verb and noun phrase.



Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Grapheme Games


INCONSISTENT is an anagram of N IS, N IS NOT, ETC.

If A=1, B=2, C=3, etc., then ARM + BEND = ELBOW and KING + CHAIR = THRONE.
STONE AGE = STAGE ONE




graph·eme 
n.
1. A letter of an alphabet.
2. All of the letters and letter combinations that represent a phoneme, as f, ph, and gh for the phoneme /f/.

grapheme 
n.
(Linguistics) Linguistics one of a set of orthographic symbols (letters or combinations of letters) in a given language that serve to distinguish one word from another and usually correspond to or represent phonemes, e.g. the f in fun, the ph in phantom, and the gh in laugh [from Greek graphēma a letter]

Definitions via thefreedictionary.com
Games via Futility Closet
Image




Saturday, October 6, 2012

Gogh On Now, Play With Words

FAMILY TREE OF VINCENT VAN GOGH


Vincent's dizzy aunt-------------------------------------- Verti Gogh
His brother who ate prunes------------------------- Gotta Gogh
The brother who worked at a convenience store ------ Stop N Gogh
The grandfather from Yugoslavia----------------------------- U Gogh
His magician uncle -------------------------------- Where-diddy Gogh
His Mexican cousin ------------------------------------A Mee Gogh
The Mexican cousin's American half-brother ------------Gring Gogh
The nephew who drove a stage coach ---------------Wells-far Gogh
The constipated uncle------------------------------------- Can't Gogh
The ballroom dancing aunt-------------------------------- Tang Gogh
The bird lover uncle-------------------------------------- Flamin Gogh
The fruit-loving cousin-------------------------------------- Man Gogh
An aunt who taught positive thinking ------------------ Way-to-Gogh
The little bouncy nephew----------------------------------- Po Gogh
A sister who loved disco---------------------------------- Go Gogh
And his niece who travels the country in an RV --- Winnie Bay Gogh

I saw you smiling ... There ya Gogh

I received this humorous take on van Gogh's family in an email.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Moviemash Sequel


Chimpanzee salmon fishing.

Once chimpanzee completes journey to safe cabin in the woods, it is time for salmon fishing.

Thank you, cousin Kristin, for the update on chimpanzee you posted on Facebook. 

Friday, May 18, 2012

Moviemash


Chimpanzee journey 2 safe cabin in the woods.

This picture, posted by my cousin on Facebook, reminded me of Stan Carey's bookmashes.

I especially loved my cousin's comment: "I would see that movie in a heartbeat."

Thanks for the fun, Kristin.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Scarecrow Conducts Linguistics Field Research

I usually don't pay too much attention to memes (most of them hold little humor for me) and I rarely write about them because they grow old so fast; however, I couldn't resist this one because it reminded me of a dear friend.  







It appears this scarecrow loves vegetable puns but is scared of apostrophes.

Scarecrow meme via Tastefully Offensive.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Playing With Polysemy

Polysemy differs from homonymy because polysemes are etymologically related words. Homonyms are words that have unrelated meanings.

The very talented Christian Yoder has had a lot of fun playing with polysemy.

ORDER IN THE COURT - When you are ready, here are some examples from his tumblr blog:



WORDPLAY

Polyseme “Order”

ORDER #2
A Soldier
orders in
orders out
orders with
orders without
orders for
orders from
and through
when ordering
from a composite order
of all orders.

ORDER #3
A judge abided by
his order stating that
with order and
for order are
under order
within order and
amid order
according to order.



ORDER #4
The orderly sergeant
calls to order
the order of battle
or the order of arms.

ORDER #5
The ordained order
take holy orders
in the order of worship
which is orderly ordered.
from the ordered mass.

ORDER #6
The order losers
buy order ware
from the order board
or order bill.

ORDER #7
The ordered class
keep order
in ordering orders
by the order paper.


Order numbers 2 -3 Copyright © 9/10/1983 by Christian M. Yoder
Order numbers 4 -7 Copyright © 7/22/1983 by Christian M. Yoder


Just out of curiosity, did anyone else notice that ORDER #1 is missing and that the copyright dates are not in order? I wonder if his blog is out of order.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Google Plays with Words

One of twelve unexpectedly funny Google results from oddee.com -


Which reminds me...


I definitely see the resemblance between this logo and Google's. Check out the recent post over at Fritinancy about the atrocious name and logo for this legal-services business.


Friday, October 8, 2010

Phonetics-Based Humor

I just heard this joke and got a kick out of the humor that results when playing with the sounds in a well-known noun phrase.


What do you get when you feed a mallard to a cat?





A duck-filled, fatty-puss.

By substituting a labiodental fricative, /f/, for the first two bilabial stops, /b/ and /p/, and by deleting the second alveolar liquid, /l/, a duck-billed platypus becomes a duck-filled, fatty-puss.


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Variation on an Idiom

As the two frogs sat on a lily pad, one commented to the other,

“Time sure is fun when you’re having flies.”



Of course it is also true that...

Time flies when you're having fun.

And viewing these idioms concurrently presents a perfect example of why lexical categorizations should not rely on semantic definitions.

In the first sentence "fun" is an adjective and "flies" is a noun.

In the second sentence "fun" is a noun and "flies" is a verb.

Thanks for the laugh Mike.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Austin Powers Takes a Powder

I passed a truck on the expressway last week and at an 80 mph + glance I was only able to catch the name of the company printed on the side of the truck. I had never heard of the company and had no idea what they did.

Upon seeing the name, I initially thought the company owners were being creative in naming their business by using wordplay and the popularity of the Austin Powers movie franchise to attract customers.



So much for my theory. I later found out that Austin Powder Co. is the oldest manufacturing enterprise in Cleveland. It was formed in 1833 by five brothers with the last name of Austin (not by Austin Powers).

Oh, and the powder referred to in the name of the company is explosive powder.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Puzzle Published in Speculative Grammarian

I am honored to announce that Speculative Grammarian recently published a wordplay puzzle that I created.

Here is a link to the issue:
SPECULATIVE GRAMMARIAN
Volume CLIX, Number 4, September 2010

And here is a link to the page on which the puzzle appears:




The puzzle was previously published on this blog as Wordplay for Phoneticians

Monday, May 17, 2010

Wordplay for Phoneticians

Following is a rebus-like variation of a well-known idiom. Can you guess what it is?

ull ou all the sos.


Here is a pictographic hint.






And the answer is:


Pull out all the stops.



In phonetics, a stop is a sound that is made by completely stopping and then releasing airflow in the vocal tract. The first version of the idiom in this post is written without the alphabetic letters that represent the stop sounds.

These are the sounds that the IPA classifies as stops: /p,b,t,d,k,g/.

The idiom "pull out all the stops" is defined by thefreedictionary.com as:
"to do everything you can to make something successful."


The Phrase Finder notes on the origin of the phrase include:

"The popular belief is that this phrase derives from the manner of construction of pipe organs. These instruments have stops to control the air flow through the pipes and pulling them out increases the musical volume. This seems to be the type of casual easy answer that is the hallmark of folk etymology. In this case, the popular belief isn't a fallacy but is in fact correct."

Etymologically, this idiom has more to do with phonetics than the uninitiated might picture at first glance.


Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Reverse English Revisited

Back in December I posted an incredible video that featured a very talented individual known as OneManSho singing a song in reverse.

Here is the video -






And here is a link to the video on YouTube in case your browser does not allow you to view it here.

At any rate, the reason I bring up this post is...I have since learned that some people arrived on the post from an unusual search engine with which I was not familiar. Here is a screen shot of the search engine -


No, this is not an error.

Here are a few of the FAQ and answers from the search engine creator -

1.1 Why is this backwards?

It's a Google mirror. A common practice for busy websites is to create a mirror site, which is an exact replica of the original site but on a different server. This way if one server is really busy, you can go to the other server. elgooG is a play on this idea, except instead of an exact replica of the site, it's a mirror image of the site.


1.2. Why have you done this?

For fun. I thought it was a pretty funny idea and an interesting programming challenge, so I did it.


1.3. Well, yes - but what's the point? Other than humor.

It helps promotes reading backwards, which could be useful in such situations as reading the front of an ambulance or playing scrabble.

For more FAQ and answers click here - Google Mirror FAQ

Nuf, nuf, nuf. yalp evol I.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Homonyms, Innuendo and Obama's Package

Though the original article is over a year old, this photo of a headline from Eastern Michigan University's The Echo just showed up in my e-mail this week.


At first glance, I assumed it was another poorly written headline similar to a crash blossom. I figured the article was probably about Obama's economic stimulus package and not about the type of package that Urban Dictionary defines as "Male genitalia (penis and scrotum together), often associated with large size." I had a good chuckle at how homonyms lend themselves to humorous interpretations of vague sentences (quite the innuendo in this case).


Then I decided to look for the original article.


I have never seen such an outstanding example of having fun with language. Not only is the headline an example of intentional wordplay, the entire article is a wonderful satirical innuendo. Great job Tom Brandt.

Here is the article in its entirety:




Republicans are not sparing the rod when it comes to beating up on President Obama’s economic stimulus package, but it’s clear they are unable to raise their membership to withstand the newly found vigor of his congressional muscle.

President Obama’s massive $819 billion spending-and-tax-cut package was rammed through the U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday without the support of a single Republican member. Even with 11 Democratic representatives opposing the bill, the 244-to-188 count reflected the bulging Democratic majority that has now swollen the House.

Ever since the Republican fantasy of endless majorities began collapsing beneath a disgusting load of GOP lies and incompetence in 2006, Republicans have quickly come to realize they can look probably forward to many legislative defeats like Wednesday’s ahead.

For six long years, America gave the Republicans all the rope they wanted – and sure enough – now they have hung themselves.

While the lopsided tally of Wednesday’s House vote surely must have been hard on GOP members, President Obama was not about to stick it to Republicans, as he graciously invited Congressional leaders of both parties to the White House that evening for cocktails.

“He said he wanted action, bold and swift,” pointed out Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democrat of California, according to the New York Times, as debate began Wednesday morning on Obama’s gigantic package, “and that is exactly what we we’re doing today.”

As debate over the dimensions of Obama’s package snaked through the House, the blame game over who bore responsibility for America’s current economic pickle grew predictably partisan.

According to the Times account, Rep. Virginia Foxx, Republican of North Carolina, raised the familiar argument that GOP tax cuts in 2001 had stimulated years of job growth. The firmness of the U.S. economy had only flagged, Rep. Foxx complained, once Democrats fastened their grip on Congress in 2006.

These comments obviously pricked the ears of Democratic Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, who noodled his GOP opponents by pointing out it was their member’s dysfunction that savaged America with “the economics that got us into this mess.”

Although conservative commentators like Fox News’s Glenn Beck have hammered the president’s stimulus package as somehow “socialistic,” arguing in his January 26th column that America should “call a spade a spade,” most observers view the Obama plan as much more likely to stimulate America’s flaccid free-market system than Bush and Paulson’s bailouts for the big banks – which shafted the country’s real working stiffs.

The meat of the Obama package consists of billions for the states, and programs to help families overcome the hardships brought on by six years of Republicans jimmying with government regulation and jacking up corporate welfare.

In the end, witnessing the Obama stimulus package being massaged by Congress is much like watching any government sausage being made; it’s not for the faint of heart. But this package is probably the best tool available to stimulate America’s soft economy – and in that, we can all take some satisfaction.

The Obama package may not be the best piece of stimulative legislation ever to enter the Oval Office, but it represents the best job harried congressional members are likely to come up with. And it certainly beats any package Bush ever raised.
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