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SPOONERISMS Spoonerisms are words or phrases in which letters or syllables get swapped. This often happens accidentally in slips of the tongue (or tips of the slung as Spoonerisms are often affectionately called!): Come and wook out of the lindow is an example.
Of course, there are many millions of possible Spoonerisms, but those which are of most interest (mainly for their amusement value) are the ones in which the Spoonerism makes sense as well as the original phrase.  Go and shake a tower and awell-boiled icicle illustrate this well  (go and take a shower, a well-oiled bicycle).
Since Spoonerisms are phonetic transpositions,  it is not so much the letters which are swapped as the sounds themselves.  Transposing initial consonants in the speedof light gives the leed of spight which is clearly meaningless when written,  but phonetically it becomes the  lead of spite.
It is not restricted simply to the transposition of individual sounds;  whole words or large parts of words may be swapped:  to gap the bridge and manahuman soup (to bridge the gap, superhuman man).  And sounds within a word may be transposed to form a Spoonerism too, as in crinimal and cerely (criminal, celery).  It is not uncommon for Spoonerisms of this type to be created unintentionally.
Generally Spoonerisms which are produced accidentally are transpositions between words that resemble one another phonetically, such as  cuss and kiddle and  slow and sneet  (kiss and cuddle, snow and sleet).
The name Spoonerism comes from the Reverend William Archibald Spooner who is reputed to have been particularly prone to making this type of verbal slip.  Spooner, who also was an albino and a sufferer of poor eye-sight, was born July 22, 1844 (d. 1930). Photos of him are scarce, but the National Portrait Gallery in London has the one reproduced here…
Article from Reader's Digest, February 1995.   Rear Deeders, how your beds.  Let us salute the eponymous master of the verbal somersault, the Rev. William Archibald Spooner.   He left us all a legacy of laughter. He also gave the dictionary a new entry:   SPOONERISM.   The very word brings a smile.  It refers to the linguistic flip-flops that turn "a well-oiled bicycle" into "a well-boiled icicle" and other ludicrous ways speakers of English get their mix all talked up.
English is a fertile soil for spoonerisms, as author and lecturer Richard Lederer points out, because our language has more than three times as many words as any other -- 616,500 and growing at 450 a year.  Consequently, there's a greater chance that any accidental transposition of letters or syllables will produce rhyming substitutes that still make sense -- sort of. "Spooner," says Lederer, "gave us tinglish errors and English terrors at the same time."
Born in 1844 in London, Spooner became an Anglican priest and a scholar.  During a 60-year association with Oxford University, he lectured in history, philosophy, and divinity.  From 1876 to 1889, he served as a dean, and from 1903 to 1924 as warden, or president. Spooner was an albino, small, with a pink face, poor eyesight, and a head too large for his body.  His reputation was that of a genial, kindly, hospitable man.
He seems also to have been somewhat of an absent-minded professor.  He once invited a faculty member to tea "to welcome our new archaeology Fellow." "But, sir," the man replied, "I AM our new archaeology Fellow." "Never mind," Spooner said.  "Come all the same." After a Sunday service, he turned back to the pulpit and informed his student audience: "In the sermon I have just preached, whenever I said Aristotle, I meant St. Paul."
But Spooner was no featherbrain.  In fact, his mind was so nimble his tongue couldn't keep up.  The Greeks had a word for this type of impediment long before Spooner was born: METATHESIS.  It means the act of switching things around. Reverend Spooner's tendency to get words and sounds crossed up could happen at any time, but especially when he was agitated.  He reprimanded one student for "fighting a liar in the quadrangle" and another who "hissed my mystery lecture."  To the latter he added in disgust, "You have tasted two worms."
Patriotic fervour excited Spooner as well.  He raised his toast to Her Highness Victoria: "Three cheers for our queer old dean!"  During WWI he reassured his students, "When our boys come home from France, we will have the hags flung out," and he lionized Britain's farmers as "noble tons of soil." His goofs at chapel were legendary.  "The Lord is thy shoving leopard," he once intoned.  He quoted I Corinthians 13:12 as, "For now we see through a dark, glassly..."  Officiating at a wedding, he prompted a hesitant bridegroom, "Son, it is now kisstomary to cuss the bride."  And to a stranger seated in the wrong place: "I believe you're occupewing my pie.  May I sew you to another sheet?"
Did Spooner really say, "Which of us has not felt in his heart a half-warmed fish?"  He certainly could have -- he was trying to say "half-formed wish." Lederer offers these other authentic spoonerisms: At a naval review Spooner marvelled at "this vast display of cattle ships and bruisers." To a school official's secretary: "Is the bean dizzy?" Visiting a friend's country cottage: "You have a nosy little cook here."
Two years before his death in 1930 at age 86, Spooner told an interviewer he could recall only one of his trademark fluffs.  It was one he made announcing the hymn, "KinkeringCongs Their Titles Take," meaning to say "Conquering Kings." So if you have made a verbal slip, rest easy.  Many have.  Radio announcer Harry Von Zell once introduced the president as HoobertHeever.  And Lowell Thomas presented British minister Sir Stafford Cripps and Sir Stifford Craps.
Thanks to Reverend Spooner's style-setting somersaults, our own little tips of the slung will not be looked upon as the embarrassing babblings of a nitwit, but rather the whimsical lapses of a nimble brain. So let us applaud that gentle man who lent his tame to the nerm.  May sod rest his goal.
In the 1930s and 1940s, F. Chase Taylor – under his pseudonym of Colonel Stoopnagle – wrote many spoonerism fairy tales which appeared both in print and on his radio show. The original ones were printed in the Saturday Evening Post and he eventually published a collection of the stories in 1946 – a book which is now sadly out of print and much sought after. However, we are pleased to bring you a number of these stories on Fun-with-words.com, by Colonel Stoopnagle and other authors: Prinderellaand the Since by Colonel Stoopnagle. Beeping Sleauty by Colonel Stoopnagle. Ali Theeva and the Forty Babs by Colonel Stoopnagle. The Pea Little Thrigs by Mark Fitzsimmons. Goldybear and the Three Locks.
Here is one of his spoonerized stories, a version of the fairytale Cinderella and the Prince. Prinderella and the Cince by Colonel Stoopnagle Here, indeed, is a story that'll make your creshfleep. It will give you poosegimples. Think of a poor little glip of a surl, prairie vitty, who, just because she had two sistyuglers, had to flop the more, clinkle the shuvvers out of the stitchen cove and do all the other chastynores, while her soamlyhisters went to a drancybess fall. Wasn't that a shirty dame? Well, to make a long shorrystort, this younglesshapster was chewing her doors one day, when who should suddenly appear but a garryfawdmother. Beeling very fadly for this witty prafe, she happed her clands, said a couple of waggicmerds, and in the ash of a flybrow, Cinderella* was transformed into a bavagingreauty.
And out at the sturbcone stood a nagmificentcoaldengoach, made of a pipe rellowyumpkin. The gaudy fairmother told her to hop in and dive to the drance, but added that she must positively be mid by homelight. So, overmoash with accumtion, she fanked the tharry from the hottom of her bart, bimedacloard, the driver whacked his crip, and off they went in a dowd of clust. Soon they came to a casterfulwundel, where a pransomehince was possing a tarty for the teeple of the pown. Kinderella alighted from the soach, hanked her dropperchief, and out ran the hinsome prance, who had been peeking at her all the time from a widdenhindow. The suglyisters stood bylently sigh, not sinderizingReckognella in her goyalrarments.
Well, to make a long shorty still storer, the nince went absolutely pruts over the pruvvlylincess. After several dowers of antsing, he was ayzier than crevver. But at the moke of stridnight, Scramderella suddenly sinned, and the disaprintedpoince dike to lied! He had forgotten to ask the nincess her prame! But as she went stunning down the long reps, she slicked off one of the glass kippers she was wearing, and the pounce princed upon it with eemingglize. The next day he tied all over trown to find the laintydaydy whose foot slitted that fipper. And the ditty prame with the only fit that footed was none other than our laydingleedy. So she finally prairied the mince, and they happed livily after everward. * Parzepleedon me for nelling the spame in such a morrectcranner.
NOW......Can you figure these ones out?  Know your blows Lack of pies Bowel feast Pit nicking Wave the sails HAVE FUN!

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Spoonerism

  • 1.
  • 2. SPOONERISMS Spoonerisms are words or phrases in which letters or syllables get swapped. This often happens accidentally in slips of the tongue (or tips of the slung as Spoonerisms are often affectionately called!): Come and wook out of the lindow is an example.
  • 3. Of course, there are many millions of possible Spoonerisms, but those which are of most interest (mainly for their amusement value) are the ones in which the Spoonerism makes sense as well as the original phrase.  Go and shake a tower and awell-boiled icicle illustrate this well (go and take a shower, a well-oiled bicycle).
  • 4. Since Spoonerisms are phonetic transpositions, it is not so much the letters which are swapped as the sounds themselves. Transposing initial consonants in the speedof light gives the leed of spight which is clearly meaningless when written, but phonetically it becomes the  lead of spite.
  • 5. It is not restricted simply to the transposition of individual sounds; whole words or large parts of words may be swapped:  to gap the bridge and manahuman soup (to bridge the gap, superhuman man). And sounds within a word may be transposed to form a Spoonerism too, as in crinimal and cerely (criminal, celery). It is not uncommon for Spoonerisms of this type to be created unintentionally.
  • 6. Generally Spoonerisms which are produced accidentally are transpositions between words that resemble one another phonetically, such as  cuss and kiddle and  slow and sneet  (kiss and cuddle, snow and sleet).
  • 7. The name Spoonerism comes from the Reverend William Archibald Spooner who is reputed to have been particularly prone to making this type of verbal slip. Spooner, who also was an albino and a sufferer of poor eye-sight, was born July 22, 1844 (d. 1930). Photos of him are scarce, but the National Portrait Gallery in London has the one reproduced here…
  • 8. Article from Reader's Digest, February 1995.   Rear Deeders, how your beds.  Let us salute the eponymous master of the verbal somersault, the Rev. William Archibald Spooner.   He left us all a legacy of laughter. He also gave the dictionary a new entry:   SPOONERISM.   The very word brings a smile.  It refers to the linguistic flip-flops that turn "a well-oiled bicycle" into "a well-boiled icicle" and other ludicrous ways speakers of English get their mix all talked up.
  • 9. English is a fertile soil for spoonerisms, as author and lecturer Richard Lederer points out, because our language has more than three times as many words as any other -- 616,500 and growing at 450 a year.  Consequently, there's a greater chance that any accidental transposition of letters or syllables will produce rhyming substitutes that still make sense -- sort of. "Spooner," says Lederer, "gave us tinglish errors and English terrors at the same time."
  • 10. Born in 1844 in London, Spooner became an Anglican priest and a scholar.  During a 60-year association with Oxford University, he lectured in history, philosophy, and divinity.  From 1876 to 1889, he served as a dean, and from 1903 to 1924 as warden, or president. Spooner was an albino, small, with a pink face, poor eyesight, and a head too large for his body.  His reputation was that of a genial, kindly, hospitable man.
  • 11. He seems also to have been somewhat of an absent-minded professor.  He once invited a faculty member to tea "to welcome our new archaeology Fellow." "But, sir," the man replied, "I AM our new archaeology Fellow." "Never mind," Spooner said.  "Come all the same." After a Sunday service, he turned back to the pulpit and informed his student audience: "In the sermon I have just preached, whenever I said Aristotle, I meant St. Paul."
  • 12. But Spooner was no featherbrain.  In fact, his mind was so nimble his tongue couldn't keep up.  The Greeks had a word for this type of impediment long before Spooner was born: METATHESIS.  It means the act of switching things around. Reverend Spooner's tendency to get words and sounds crossed up could happen at any time, but especially when he was agitated.  He reprimanded one student for "fighting a liar in the quadrangle" and another who "hissed my mystery lecture."  To the latter he added in disgust, "You have tasted two worms."
  • 13. Patriotic fervour excited Spooner as well.  He raised his toast to Her Highness Victoria: "Three cheers for our queer old dean!"  During WWI he reassured his students, "When our boys come home from France, we will have the hags flung out," and he lionized Britain's farmers as "noble tons of soil." His goofs at chapel were legendary.  "The Lord is thy shoving leopard," he once intoned.  He quoted I Corinthians 13:12 as, "For now we see through a dark, glassly..."  Officiating at a wedding, he prompted a hesitant bridegroom, "Son, it is now kisstomary to cuss the bride."  And to a stranger seated in the wrong place: "I believe you're occupewing my pie.  May I sew you to another sheet?"
  • 14. Did Spooner really say, "Which of us has not felt in his heart a half-warmed fish?"  He certainly could have -- he was trying to say "half-formed wish." Lederer offers these other authentic spoonerisms: At a naval review Spooner marvelled at "this vast display of cattle ships and bruisers." To a school official's secretary: "Is the bean dizzy?" Visiting a friend's country cottage: "You have a nosy little cook here."
  • 15. Two years before his death in 1930 at age 86, Spooner told an interviewer he could recall only one of his trademark fluffs.  It was one he made announcing the hymn, "KinkeringCongs Their Titles Take," meaning to say "Conquering Kings." So if you have made a verbal slip, rest easy.  Many have.  Radio announcer Harry Von Zell once introduced the president as HoobertHeever.  And Lowell Thomas presented British minister Sir Stafford Cripps and Sir Stifford Craps.
  • 16. Thanks to Reverend Spooner's style-setting somersaults, our own little tips of the slung will not be looked upon as the embarrassing babblings of a nitwit, but rather the whimsical lapses of a nimble brain. So let us applaud that gentle man who lent his tame to the nerm.  May sod rest his goal.
  • 17. In the 1930s and 1940s, F. Chase Taylor – under his pseudonym of Colonel Stoopnagle – wrote many spoonerism fairy tales which appeared both in print and on his radio show. The original ones were printed in the Saturday Evening Post and he eventually published a collection of the stories in 1946 – a book which is now sadly out of print and much sought after. However, we are pleased to bring you a number of these stories on Fun-with-words.com, by Colonel Stoopnagle and other authors: Prinderellaand the Since by Colonel Stoopnagle. Beeping Sleauty by Colonel Stoopnagle. Ali Theeva and the Forty Babs by Colonel Stoopnagle. The Pea Little Thrigs by Mark Fitzsimmons. Goldybear and the Three Locks.
  • 18. Here is one of his spoonerized stories, a version of the fairytale Cinderella and the Prince. Prinderella and the Cince by Colonel Stoopnagle Here, indeed, is a story that'll make your creshfleep. It will give you poosegimples. Think of a poor little glip of a surl, prairie vitty, who, just because she had two sistyuglers, had to flop the more, clinkle the shuvvers out of the stitchen cove and do all the other chastynores, while her soamlyhisters went to a drancybess fall. Wasn't that a shirty dame? Well, to make a long shorrystort, this younglesshapster was chewing her doors one day, when who should suddenly appear but a garryfawdmother. Beeling very fadly for this witty prafe, she happed her clands, said a couple of waggicmerds, and in the ash of a flybrow, Cinderella* was transformed into a bavagingreauty.
  • 19. And out at the sturbcone stood a nagmificentcoaldengoach, made of a pipe rellowyumpkin. The gaudy fairmother told her to hop in and dive to the drance, but added that she must positively be mid by homelight. So, overmoash with accumtion, she fanked the tharry from the hottom of her bart, bimedacloard, the driver whacked his crip, and off they went in a dowd of clust. Soon they came to a casterfulwundel, where a pransomehince was possing a tarty for the teeple of the pown. Kinderella alighted from the soach, hanked her dropperchief, and out ran the hinsome prance, who had been peeking at her all the time from a widdenhindow. The suglyisters stood bylently sigh, not sinderizingReckognella in her goyalrarments.
  • 20. Well, to make a long shorty still storer, the nince went absolutely pruts over the pruvvlylincess. After several dowers of antsing, he was ayzier than crevver. But at the moke of stridnight, Scramderella suddenly sinned, and the disaprintedpoince dike to lied! He had forgotten to ask the nincess her prame! But as she went stunning down the long reps, she slicked off one of the glass kippers she was wearing, and the pounce princed upon it with eemingglize. The next day he tied all over trown to find the laintydaydy whose foot slitted that fipper. And the ditty prame with the only fit that footed was none other than our laydingleedy. So she finally prairied the mince, and they happed livily after everward. * Parzepleedon me for nelling the spame in such a morrectcranner.
  • 21. NOW......Can you figure these ones out?  Know your blows Lack of pies Bowel feast Pit nicking Wave the sails HAVE FUN!