A 'homophone' is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but differs in meaning. The words may be spelled the same, such as ''
rose'' (flower) and ''rose'' (past tense of "rise"), or differently, such as ''
carat'', ''
caret'', and ''
carrot'', or ''your'' and ''you're''. A homophone is a specific type of '
homonym'. The term may also be used to apply to units shorter than words, such as letters or group of letters which are pronounced the same as another letter or group of letters.
Homophones are often used to create
puns and to deceive the reader (as in
crossword puzzles) or to suggest multiple meanings. The last usage is common in
poetry and creative
literature. An example of this is seen in
Dylan Thomas' radio play ''Under Milk Wood'': "The shops in mourning" where ''mourning'' can be heard as ''mourning'' or ''morning''. Another vivid example is
Thomas Hood's poem "Faithless Sally Brown":
:His death, which happen'd in his berth,
:At forty-odd befell:
:They went and told the sexton, and
:The sexton toll'd the bell.
Homophones in the context of
word games are also known as "oronyms". This term was coined by
Gyles Brandreth and first published in his book ''The Joy of Lex'' (1980), and it was used in the
BBC programme ''Never Mind the Full Stops'', which also featured Brandreth as a guest.
Examples of "oronyms" (which may only be true homophones in certain dialects of English) include
:'mint spy' vs 'mince pie';
:'ice cream' vs. 'I scream'
:'stuffy nose' vs. 'stuff he knows';
:'euthanasia' vs. 'youth in Asia';
:'situation' vs. 'sit, you Asian';
:
'i.c.q.' vs. 'I seek you'.
: 'depend' vs. 'deep end'
Two oronyms appear in "Ana's Song (Open Fire)" by
Silverchair. While they initially sound like
mondegreens, reading the lyrics will reveal that this is not the case. The first line of the song, "Please die Ana, for as long as you're here we're not", also sounds very much like "Please Diana, ...", which confuses people into believing that "Ana" is a person, when really it is just a nickname for anorexia. The next verse is "And Ana wrecks your life, like an
anorexia life", which is another oronym that proves ana's real meaning.
American comedian
Jeff Foxworthy frequently uses oronyms in his Appalachian routine. Notable examples include, "Initiate: My wife ate two sandwiches, ''initiate'' (and then she ate) a bag o' tater chips." and "Mayonnaise: ''Mayonnaise'' (Man, there is) a lot of people here tonight."
Mad Gab is a team oronym solving game.
Use in psychological research
Pseudo-Homophones
Pseudo-homophones are non-words that are
phonetically identical to a word. Pseudo-homophone pairs are pairs of phonetically identical letter strings where one string is a word and the other is a non-word. For example, groan/grone and crane/crain are pseudo-homophone pairs, whereas plane/plain is a homophone pair since both letter strings are recognised words, both types of pairs are used in
lexical decision tasks to investigate
word recognition.
Use as ambiguous information
Homophones where one spelling is of a threatening nature and one is not (''e.g.'' slay/sleigh, war/wore) have been used in studies of
anxiety as a test of cognitive models that those with high anxiety tend to interpret ambiguous information in a threatening manner. See Mogg K, Bradley BP, Miller T, Potts H, Glenwright J, Kentish J (1994). Interpretation of homophones related to threat: Anxiety or response bias effects? ''Cognitive Therapy and Research'', '18'(5), 461-77.
See also
For a complete list of homophones refer to the following Wiktionary appendices.
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