MM

"Mike Marlow"

12/01/2011 11:37 PM

Need Help - Oh hell, how do I explain this...

Seems to me that at some point over the past couple of months, one of you
fine gentlemen made a post about sentences that surprise you with their
ending. There was a word posted here that describes that type of sentence.
Damned if I can remember what that word is. If this rings any bells with
any of you English sentence gurus out there - sing out.

Thanks,

--

-Mike-
[email protected]


This topic has 5 replies

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "Mike Marlow" on 12/01/2011 11:37 PM

12/01/2011 11:33 PM

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 00:51:36 -0500, "Mike Marlow"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Norvin Gordon wrote:
>> Mike Marlow wrote:
>>> Seems to me that at some point over the past couple of months, one
>>> of you fine gentlemen made a post about sentences that surprise you
>>> with their ending. There was a word posted here that describes that
>>> type of sentence. Damned if I can remember what that word is. If
>>> this rings any bells with any of you English sentence gurus out
>>> there - sing out. Thanks,
>>>
>>
>> Is paraprosdokian the word you are looking for?
>
>Mister - I'm gonna buy you a beer if we ever meet up. You hit it. \

Emo Williams had an interesting (and timely!) sample of this.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraprosdokian

--
Some people hear voices. Some see invisible people.
Others have no imagination whatsoever.

LZ

Luigi Zanasi

in reply to "Mike Marlow" on 12/01/2011 11:37 PM

13/01/2011 10:11 AM

On Jan 13, 9:41=A0am, Larry Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:
> Reminds me of "sudorific", a trick word on an IQ test long ago. =A0The
> tester explained that if you knew the meaning and were not a medical
> student/profesional, it meant you'd had that test before :-).

Actually, if you're a francophone, you would know it as
"antisudorifique" is blared at you from TV commercials quite often.

And if you speak Italian, you know the meaning of "sudore" and its
obvious derivative "sudorifico",

Obviously, speaking French and/or Italian means you have a higher
IQ. :-)

Luigi

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "Mike Marlow" on 12/01/2011 11:37 PM

13/01/2011 12:51 AM

Norvin Gordon wrote:
> Mike Marlow wrote:
>> Seems to me that at some point over the past couple of months, one
>> of you fine gentlemen made a post about sentences that surprise you
>> with their ending. There was a word posted here that describes that
>> type of sentence. Damned if I can remember what that word is. If
>> this rings any bells with any of you English sentence gurus out
>> there - sing out. Thanks,
>>
>
> Is paraprosdokian the word you are looking for?

Mister - I'm gonna buy you a beer if we ever meet up. You hit it. \

Thanks,

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

NG

Norvin Gordon

in reply to "Mike Marlow" on 12/01/2011 11:37 PM

12/01/2011 10:58 PM

Mike Marlow wrote:
> Seems to me that at some point over the past couple of months, one of you
> fine gentlemen made a post about sentences that surprise you with their
> ending. There was a word posted here that describes that type of sentence.
> Damned if I can remember what that word is. If this rings any bells with
> any of you English sentence gurus out there - sing out.
>
> Thanks,
>

Is paraprosdokian the word you are looking for?

LB

Larry Blanchard

in reply to "Mike Marlow" on 12/01/2011 11:37 PM

13/01/2011 5:41 PM

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 00:51:36 -0500, Mike Marlow wrote:

> Is paraprosdokian the word you are looking for?
>
> Mister - I'm gonna buy you a beer if we ever meet up. You hit it.

I thought I had a pretty good vocabulary, but that's a new one to me.
Thanks.

Reminds me of "sudorific", a trick word on an IQ test long ago. The
tester explained that if you knew the meaning and were not a medical
student/profesional, it meant you'd had that test before :-).

--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw


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