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Dittograms“The nose knows.” This aphorism is a classic example of a homophone pair, two adjacent words that have the same sound. The soccer score “two to two” is a homophone triplet. Words and phrases with repeated sounds are called dittograms. Although many sentences contain dittograms (“A table for four, please.”), the trick is to see how many dittograms you can get into one coherent sentence. Let’s start with a few simple examples and slowly get more ambitious. Roadkill Rick usually took carrion carry-on when he flew. On breezy days Gale couldn’t find stationary stationery for his novel novel. In the Vatican, a popery potpourri comes from sealing ceiling art. For a Roma aroma, the popery sent the potpourri scent. When playing his fiddle, Count Sheep read red notes but blew blue tunes. The new ewe knew you. Although she can’t cant, she certainly can can-can. A noise annoys the principle principal. Lulu had had a notion that that herd heard a grisly grizzly. The rude roomers rued rumors. Cliff Hanger could bear bare bear barely. A calligrapher is a write wright who can write right after submitting to the right write wright rite. While growing marijuana, the more weed due, the more we’d do. My son read bread beats sun-red bred beets for nutrition. Paul Bunyan threw a gnu whole through a new hole. Turn a round dear tern around deer. One idol heroine won idle heroin. We knew wee new hair hides hare hides. Foursome dears meet for some deer’s meat. That hour, we knew that our wee new wood parish would perish. Most dittograms are of little interest, like weight wait and fir fur, while others, like flees fleas and buries berries, have obvious meanings. But some offer clever or humorous meanings, a sampling of which are shown below. Although dittograms employing proper nouns are excluded from this list, like Philly filly, an exception is made for the first one given here because it’s so darn cute.
Comprehendible dittograms of triple and quadruple homophones are much rarer. Can you think of any not given below and supply a meaning? bored board bored — tired of holey wood do doodoo — go hale hail hail — very cold greeting kneed knead need — call for an unorthodox masseuse lays laze leis — puts down relaxing necklaces male mail mail — armor catalog mall moll maul — gangster’s girl mishap at shopping center ore or oar — rock and row pear pair pare — double a peel rain reign rein — umbrella sense cents scents — smell the money two to two, too — similar soccer scores towed toed toad — mutant frog dragged tutu to two — encyclopedia volume vain vein vane — sign of futile mining This entertaining page is just one of the many humorous pages showing how English language words can be fun, often being the center of jokes, witticisms, puns, and jest and bringing smiles if not laughter to the comedian in each of us. |