play malaprops

sagehen sagehen at WESTELCOM.COM
Wed Jun 6 16:38:46 UTC 2007


>On Wed, Jun 06, 2007 at 08:24:36AM -0700, Arnold M. Zwicky wrote:
>> from my friend Tim McDaniel in e-mail 6/4/07, about the intelligence
>> of penguins:
>>
>>   Sorry to cast nasturtiums on your totemic bird.
>>
>> i told him i appreciated the play malaprop, and he replied that it
>> wasn't original with him, but (he thought) pretty old, possibly from
>> the Dowager Duchess of Denver in the Lord Peter Wimsey novels.
>>
>> i got 76 google webhits (with "similar pages" etc. removed) for "cast
>> nasturtiums", 86 for "casting nasturtiums", and 4 for "casts
>> nasturtiums", so it has a modest web presence.
>>
>> Urban Dictionary has "nasturtiums" as "old yorkshire speak, part of a
>> phrase", with an example of "casting nasturtiums about" something.
>> the "Slang and colloquialisms of the UK" site
>>   (http://www.peevish.co.uk/slang)
>> says
>>   *cast nasturtiums*   _Verb_.  To sully a person's reputation.  A
>> pun on 'cast aspersions'.
>>
>> it seems to me that "pun" is not quite the right label here, though
>> phonological similarity is involved.  the relationship is much like
>> that in classical malaprops, except that the choice of the wrong item
>> is deliberate.  so i called it a "play malaprop"; "mock malaprop"
>> might be even better.
>>
>> a little while back, we talked about some similar examples here --
>> little mock malaprops from friends and family.  unfortunately, i've
>> forgotten the examples and can't find them now.  anybody recall them?
>
>I don't remember this discussion, but some others that come to
>mind are "cast asparagus" for "cast aspersions" (a few exx. in
>HDAS, one from Dos Passos), "au reservoir", "horse's ovaries"
>(for "hors d'oeuvres"), "Lost Wages" (for Las Vegas), and
>"mercy buckets" (for "merci beaucoup").
>
>Jesse Sheidlower
 ~~~~~~~~~~
When we used to travel on the Youth Hostel circuit, we  often referred to
them as "hostiles," especially those with very disagreeable wardens.
Missives become "missiles" even when not hostile.  Of people with a chronic
tendency toward tactlessness, the diagnosis "hoof-in-mouth disease."
AM

~@:>   ~@:>   ~@:>   ~@:>

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