Neologism, word playing, idiosyncratic humour

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JustFoundHere
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29 Jun 2023, 6:49 pm

Cornflake wrote:
^ Thanks - ordered, and received.

It looks very interesting.


Any thoughts on 'The Pun Also Rises: How the Humble Pun Revolutionized Language, Changed History, and Made Wordplay More Than Some Antics?'



notSpock
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29 Jun 2023, 7:43 pm

Wow, this is a huge thread! (New guy here.)

This is absolutely a part of me as well, and it runs in my family. My mom's mom loved spoonerisms (e.g., "You have deliberately tasted two worms! You may leave Oxford by the town drain" instead of "wasted two terms" and "down train"). My dad was constantly making puns. He also once authored a 5000-word sentence that was grammatically correct.

As a teenager, Marshal McLuhan introduced me to pithy quotes from James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake, which is linguistic invention from beginning to end. I spent several years around that time experimenting with what the Victorians called "automatic writing" in a similar spirit, mixing bits of different languages together and playing with word roots. I especially liked to pile predicate on predicate, with the explicit goal of making the reader forget what was the original grammatical subject, and then realize that the identity of the subject did not really matter any more. Parentheses within parentheses, and who cares about the original things! We are adrift in the sea of parentheses. Meaning exists only in relation to other meaning and the unconscious is structured like a language, as that other famous word-player, the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan, said. I also used to love the philosopher Jacques Derrida's word play.



Erewhon
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01 Jul 2023, 11:47 am

My doorbell 8)

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naturalplastic
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01 Jul 2023, 12:32 pm

Erewhon wrote:
DeepHour wrote:
Erewhon wrote:
Whats the opposite of email :?:




Why not just say enonbinary?


That could have been too.


Should be e-fee-mail.



PhosphorusDecree
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04 Jul 2023, 4:11 pm

It's like there's a background program constantly running in my brain, looking for incomplete adjective / comparative / superlative trios. Latest: "Budap, Budapper, Budapest." Thanks, brain.


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naturalplastic
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04 Jul 2023, 4:17 pm

PhosphorusDecree wrote:
It's like there's a background program constantly running in my brain, looking for incomplete adjective / comparative / superlative trios. Latest: "Budap, Budapper, Budapest." Thanks, brain.


I thought that that town was named after a mosquito that interrupted his meditation.



Erewhon
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07 Jul 2023, 11:38 am

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DuckHairback
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07 Jul 2023, 11:54 am

^oh that's good.

Rob(in) Hood


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Erewhon
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08 Jul 2023, 1:02 pm

DuckHairback wrote:
^oh that's good.

Rob(in) Hood



Good answer DuckHairback :) :!:



PhosphorusDecree
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09 Jul 2023, 10:59 am

Ah, the British summer! Wimbledon, strawberries....

... actually, I'm not sure I want to eat strawberries that have been wimbled on.


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Cornflake
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09 Jul 2023, 3:34 pm

JustFoundHere wrote:
Cornflake wrote:
^ Thanks - ordered, and received.

It looks very interesting.

Any thoughts on 'The Pun Also Rises: How the Humble Pun Revolutionized Language, Changed History, and Made Wordplay More Than Some Antics?'
Erm sorry, I've not read it yet. :oops:
I tend to impulse buy books and it takes an age to catch up with them all.


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nca14
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14 Oct 2023, 8:44 am

I do not want to blaspheme, deprave or sin in other way!! !

Qurancidence (plural qurancidences) - "mentality's" neologism for a "coincidence" (mysterious dependency, fact, especially or usually mathematical, linguistic or scientific) associated with the Quran. There are really many examples of it.

In Polish: korancydencja, plural korancydencje.



PhosphorusDecree
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15 Oct 2023, 9:51 am

Aspic ratio - the proportion of meat to jelly in a pork pie.


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Erewhon
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12 Jan 2024, 12:28 pm

:) Image



Erewhon
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31 Mar 2024, 2:38 am

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naturalplastic
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31 Mar 2024, 2:56 pm

I know...judo, karate, jujitsu, akido, kendo, and several other...Japanese words!