Subject: RE: Folklore: MONDEGREENS From: Jeri Date: 07 Dec 21 - 02:25 PM If you've ever had the experience of telling someone a joke, and having to listen to him tell the next 10 people, you'd understand the "cranky". Plus this isn't a reactivation, it's a whole new thread. Please enjoy reading the old threads. You might have a new one, or you may find a new one, and you can add on. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: MONDEGREENS From: GUEST,pattyClink Date: 07 Dec 21 - 12:45 PM That's a cranky response for this festive season. I was all jazzed to post my favorite mondegreen, but now I'm not sure which thread we are allowed to re-activate, the one from 13 years ago?
-Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: Folklore: MONDEGREENS From: Reinhard Date: 07 Dec 21 - 12:00 PM Don't repeat stuff, please. There are already a lot of threads on mondegreens, e.g. mondegreen ? (click here) and others linked from that thread. |
Subject: Folklore: MONDEGREENS From: Taconicus Date: 07 Dec 21 - 11:54 AM A mondegreen is a word or phrase that results from mishearing or misinterpreting a statement or song lyric. Mondegreens are also known as oronyms. The term was coined in 1954 by American writer Sylvia Wright (and popularized by San Francisco Chronicle columnist Jon Carroll), inspired by a famous misinterpretation in the Scottish ballad "The Bonny Earl o' Moray" in which the line "And laid him on the green" was misheard and often repeated as, "And Lady Mondegreen." "Excuse me while I kiss this guy." – Jimi Hendrix "The ants are my friends. It's blowing in the wind." – Bob Dylan What's your favorite musical mondegreen, especially a wrong lyric you thought for a long time was correct? |
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