A Worldwide Punomenon: Difference between revisions

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** Why the forbidden fruit in the garden of Eden is traditionally thought of as an apple - ''malum'' is Latin for evil and apple.
* Ancient puns also appear in Plutarch's ''Parallel Lives'', for example: "one of the sons of Crassus who was thought to resemble a certain Axius, and on this account had brought his mother's name into scandalous connection with that of Axius, once made a successful speech in the senate, and when [[Cicero]] was asked what he thought of him, he answered with the Greek words "Axios Krassou" (meaning "Worthy of Crassus").
* [[Piers Anthony]]'s recent{{when}} ''[[Xanth]]'' books are a good example of [[Hurricane of Puns|overdosing on this trope]]. The worst part is [[Don't Explain the Joke|a lot of the puns are explained in recent books]].
** Take the Hippo-crite. Instead of actually ''being'' hypocritical, he just said, "I never mean what I say."
** There's been a steady increase in puns throughout the series. The first two books had only a handful of puns. After that, Piers Anthony started making the series more comedic, and adding more puns as part of the process. Then he started accepting reader-submitted puns and it and got completely out of control. Naturally, a great many Xanth fans were thrilled by this opportunity to actually be a part of their favorite series, even if only in a small way, so the puns flooded in ever-greater numbers, to the point that Anthony frequently has several books' worth of pun backlog. In-universe, Xanth is even described as being ''made of puns''.
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** Really, the series has puns ''everywhere'', including the titles of all the books and of the series itself.
* Ian Watson is another author who has an inordinate fondness for bad puns.
* [[Terry Pratchett]]'s ''[[Discworld]]'' series has the "Oh God of Hangovers" in ''[[Discworld/Hogfather|Hogfather]]''—not ''a'' god, or ''the'' god, but ''Oh, GOD'' of Hangovers. And that's just the start.
** ''[[Discworld/Night Watch (Discworld)|Night Watch]]'' contains a sequence describing the ornamental armour Sam Vimes has to wear, and how it makes him feel like a class traitor. The pune-chline: {{spoiler|"It was gilt by association."}}
*** And the Fat Mines contained BCBs (Burnt Crusty Bits) that Vimes said died because they were battered to death.
*** There's also an example of him being entirely unable to stop himself with the story of Fingers Mazda, who stole the secret of fire from the gods. He was unable to fence it, it was too hot. He really got burned on that deal.
*** Granny Weatherwax's lodgings in the Shades are made are all the better for being next door to a notorious reseller of stolen items. Because good fences make good neighbours.
*** Magrat believes that broomsticks are sexual metaphors when witches ride them. But this is a phallusy.
** The name of the countries Djelibeybi and Hersheba. Terry Pratchett's realization that American audiences weren't getting the Djelibeybi pun inspired the creation of nearby Hersheba, which most audiences in general aren't getting. (If you've heard of the candy, the Djelibeybi pun is criminally easy to get, due to it being mentally pronounced the same way, ''[[Viewers are Morons|and]]'' [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] when we're told Djelibeybi means "[[wikipedia:Jelly Babies|Child of the Djel]]." Hersheba is not as easy—this is due to variation in pronunciation ({{spoiler|Her-[[King Solomon's Mines|Sheba]] or Hershe[y]-ba[r]}}), the fact that it doesn't have a lampshade, ''and'' it doesn't have a book focused on it.)
* [[Peter David]] loves puns, especially name puns. This includes naming people just for the pun: Sir Umbridge in ''[[Sir Apropos of Nothing]]'' is offered to him as the knight he squires under, and refusing would be a horrible offense, so "in order to not cause offense, I had to take Umbridge".
* In [[Jasper Fforde]]'s ''[[Thursday Next]]'' novels, the name of ''every'' character (except for fictional characters from other works) is a pun.
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* Too many to go into, but during the early years of ''[[Dilbert]]'', Scott Adams was REALLY REALLY into puns (very little office humor was involved, Dilbert was ostensibly an engineer just to provide a context for nerd-jokes and nerdy jokes).
* ''[[Finnegans Wake]]''. Every sentence.
* The commander in Jerome Bixby's "The Holes Around Mars" is extremely fond of puns, to the irritation of his crew.
* [[J. K. Rowling]] poured a lot of puns into the [[Harry Potter]] series, especially in the names - there's a lot of overlap with [[Meaningful Name/Literature|Meaningful Name]] (and [[Bilingual Bonus]]).
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
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* [[TNA]] wrestler Shark Boy's entire gimmick at this point is based around borrowing [[Stone Cold Steve Austin]]'s old catchphrases and mixing them with nautical puns, e.g. "Gimme a shell yeah!" and "And that's the fishin' line, 'cuz Shark Boy said so!"
 
== [[Radio]] ==
* ''[[Canada Reads]]'', a cross between a book club and a reality show, bills itself as a "title fight".
 
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=== [[Card Games]] ===
* Show up regularly in ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]''. Such as [http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=29785 ''He exercises his right to bear arms''.]
** If you attached equipment to it, would that mean you're exercising your [https://web.archive.org/web/20120518102442/http://www.basicjokes.com/dquotes.php?aid=1173 right to arm bears?]
*** If you are the master of ursine infantry, then it is within your power to make sure that they stick to a vigorous physical training regiment to ensure their battle readiness. Don't let anybody tell you different, you have the right to exercise armed bears.
**** I'm pretty sure bears exercise their right arms regularly.
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'''Mr. Know-It-All:''' No wonder I couldn't open it. It's ''jammed!'' }}
** [[Once an Episode|Every single episode]] of "Peabody's Improbable Histories" ended in a terrible pun.
** Lampshaded in the "Upsidasium" story, when the armored fighting vehicles come over the ridge:
{{quote|'''Rocky''': Tanks, Bullwinkle!
''[[beat]]''
'''Rocky''': I said, "Tanks, Bullwinkle!"
'''Bullwinkle''': Ah, do I ''have'' to say it?}}
* American cartoons also love a good pun: anything said by Genie in the ''[[Aladdin (Disney film)|Aladdin]]'' movie or series, the names in ''[[DuckTales (1987)]]'' and ''[[Tale Spin]]'', and ''[[Animaniacs]]'' and ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' made heavy use of them as well.
* In ''[[Kim Possible]]'', everyone's name is a pun.
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[[Category:Just for Pun]]
[[Category:Punny Stuff]]
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