(For the actual origins of the solfège, refer to Solfège.) The lyrics teach the solfège syllables by linking them with English
homophones (or near-homophones): •
Doe: "a deer, a female deer" refers to the first solfège syllable,
do. •
Ray: "a drop of golden sun" refers to the second solfège syllable,
re. •
Me: "a name I call myself" refers to the third solfège syllable,
mi. •
Far: "a long, long way to run" refers to the fourth solfège syllable,
fa. •
Sew: "a needle pulling thread" refers to the fifth solfège syllable,
sol or
so. •
La: "a note to follow
so" refers to the sixth solfège syllable,
la. •
Tea: "a drink with jam and bread" refers to the seventh and final solfège syllable,
ti. As the song concludes, "When you know the notes to sing, you can sing most anything." Author
Douglas Adams noted in his article "Unfinished Business of the Century" that, while each line of the lyric takes the name of a note from the solfège scale, and gives its meaning, "La, a note to follow So..." does not fit that pattern and imagines it was likely a placeholder that was never replaced. Adams humorously imagined that Oscar Hammerstein just wrote "a note to follow So" and thought he would have another look at it later, but could not come up with anything better. ==Foreign language versions==