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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

66.0. "punnish sayings" by WSGATE::MPALMER () Thu Apr 18 1985 19:26

Lots of words sound like other words run together.  I've been collecting
instances of phrases or sentences where a word and its "constituent homophones"
are used together and make sense.  Examples:

As adamant as Adam Ant.
I've flown over Andover over and over.
Information is best when it's in formation.

I've noticed a good handful more...  anybody have some more interesting
examples?

p.s. in the above examples,  two words can be concatenated into one.
The spellings can be different as long as the phonetic units sound like
other words.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
66.1REGINA::DCLThu Apr 18 1985 22:425
Ralph:		I love - and love, alas, above my station!
Buttercup:	He loves, and loves a lass above his station.
Chorus:		Yes, yes, the lass is much above his station.

			- W.S. Gilbert, "H.M.S. Pinafore"
66.2SPRITE::OSMANFri Apr 19 1985 11:312
I'm not responsible for anything I said, as I said it under her dress.

66.3WSGATE::MPALMERThu Apr 25 1985 18:001
That's because you're a pathetic apathetic.
66.4NUHAVN::CANTORMon May 06 1985 19:155
"Know what?"

"No, what?"

Dave C.
66.5HAMSTR::TORTORINOThu Jul 11 1985 21:527
I have to add here one of my all-time favorites, uttered by Lucille Ball
in one of the "Lucy" shows.  She was explaining to Viv how to open a broken
refrigerator door:

	"Jiggle it a little, it'll open."


66.6SPRITE::OSMANThu Jul 18 1985 15:022
Yell "Wrecked 'em ?".  (*wait a few seconds for folks to be shocked*).  Then
continue with "It nearly killed 'em!".
66.7OVDVAX::BRIDGESFri Jul 19 1985 16:594
  From Ogden Nash:

	What noise annoys an oyster?
66.8DVINCI::MPALMERMon Jul 29 1985 13:443
answer:

"ah" noise annoys.
66.9PUFFIN::GRUBERFri Sep 06 1985 14:008
"What a horrible end -- he was interred in turd."

"You found underwear under where?"

"Al Kaline bought an alkaline battery."  
(I know the sounds are not at all alike, but it looks good in writing...)

        -mg_
66.10STAR::CALLASMon Sep 09 1985 14:334
Along a similar line is the Latin pun, "Ubi, o ubi est meam sub ubi?" ("Where,
o where is my under where?")

	Jon
66.11Whore's hoarse horse.NEDDY::DOUGdoug dickinsonSat Sep 27 1986 16:2118
    this is a worthwhile note for some of you old-timers to come back
    to.  :-)
    
    how about a phrase or sentence made up entirely one set of homonyms
    (or something like that).  these need explanatory titles:
    
    fruit slicing duo:   Pear pare pair.
    
    actor john will jump a buffalo street: Herd'll hurdle Hertel.  (you may
    have heard of Hertel street from hill street blues. one of the writers
    is from buffalo, and there are often buffalo streets mentioned). 
    
    prostitute's sick mare:	Whore's hoarse horse.    

    trip to procure a top-notch score by Gabriel:
      Foray for a AAAA Faur�.		(AAAA = "four-A")

    						dd
66.12PointerDELNI::CANTORDave CantorSat Sep 27 1986 22:155
      Re .11
      
      There are some examples of these in note 213.*.
      
      Dave C.
66.13should be ""pair pare pear"" ??RAYNAL::OSMANand silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feepMon Sep 29 1986 18:338
Re .11:

	Shouldn't that be "pair pare pear" ?  (You might be able to
	lengthen this somehow with "Pierre" and/or "pee air" (not so
	sure about that one!) and/or "P." and/or "air" as a verb
	as in radio.

/Eric
66.14it gets worseFSTVAX::DICKINSONdoug dickinsonMon Sep 29 1986 19:2013
    pair pare pear 's explanatory title would be duo slice fruit, making
    it a headline...i just thought of a using that one to work in one
    more word:
    
    duo slice two fruits:  pair pare pear pair.
    
    or from bad to worse:
    
    fruit slicing duo slice fruit slicing duo slicing fruit:
    pair pare pear pare pair.
    
    			truly awful.		dd
    
66.15A couple more...NRMACU::BAILEYI am the hoi polloiWed Sep 19 1990 13:1710
From some wretched radio program a long time ago (I think they had a spot where
listeners were invited to send in these sayings):

	Toulouse to lose two loos.

	Emerge and see emergency.

There were a lot more, but these stuck in my memory.

Chris.
66.16TKOV51::DIAMONDThis note is illegal tender.Thu Sep 20 1990 03:024
    
>	Toulouse to lose two loos.
    
    Isn't Toulouse too loose to lose two loos?
66.17WELMTS::HILLI have a cunning plan, my lord!Thu Sep 20 1990 11:016
    I gather that "To the water, it is the hour" is the motto of the navy
    in some country where they speak French.
    
    BTW, that translates as "A l'eau, c'est l'heure"
    
    :-)
66.18with nothing to lose!AUSSIE::WHORLOWD R A B C = action planWed Sep 26 1990 04:5720
    G'day,
    
      <<< Note 66.16 by TKOV51::DIAMOND "This note is illegal tender." >>>

    
>	Toulouse to lose two loos.
    
>    Isn't Toulouse too loose to lose two loos?
    
    
    That's why inhabitants of Toulouse make a picnic of the event, and all
    travel to the next town  .....
    
    
    
    Sort of a.....
    
    Toulouse La Trek
    
    djw
66.19PRSSOS::MAILLARDDenis MAILLARDWed Sep 26 1990 11:054
    What's your opinion about Toulouse-Lautrec?
    
    Toulouse is going to win.
    		Denis.
66.20re: 66.17 -- see 256.26NEMAIL::KALIKOWDa.k.a. &#039;Golden Spike&#039; LANcasterThu Nov 08 1990 03:0713
    There's an even more amusing intro to the putative "French Nava(e?)l
    Motto" referred to in .17 available in 256.26...
    
    The problem with .17 is that when one first reads it, one might fail
    to, shall we say, grasp the full point of the matter.
    
    Hint -- Think "red lights;" think lamp-posts; think Marlene Dietrich...
    
    :-)
    
    Disingenuously,
    
    Dan Kalikow
66.21SOFBAS::TRINWARDZAPPA: `read my lips - no }&amp;@#$% taxes&#039;Fri Jun 14 1991 22:388
RE: .11

I haad a high-school classmate who flunked Latin TWO years in a row, and 
later claimed the only thing he'd learned was:

		SEMPER UBI SUB UBI == always wear underwear

- Steve  ;^}