In modern terms,
spoonerism generally refers to any changing of sounds in this manner.
Comedy • The long-running British comedy television show
The Two Ronnies regularly featured segments with
Ronnie Barker delivering a mock-serious speech littered with spoonerisms, written by Barker. Writing in tribute for the inaugural
Ronnie Barker Talk,
Ben Elton wrote: What an honour. I grew up loving Ronnie Barker and can only hope the news that I am to give a talk in his name doesn't leave him spitting spiritedly splenetic spoonerisms in comedy heaven. • The Washington, D.C. political comedy group
Capitol Steps had a long-standing tradition of performing a routine named "Lirty Dies" during every performance, which features a typically 10-minute-long barrage of rapid-fire topical spoonerisms. A few examples over the years range from "Resident Pagan" (President Reagan) and the US's periodic practice of "Licking their Peaders" (Picking their leaders) to the NSA "poopin' on Snutin" (Snoopin' on Putin) and "phugging everybody's bones" (bugging everybody's phones). • Comedian
Jane Ace was notorious for her spoonerisms and other similar plays on words during her time as main actress of the radio situation comedy
Easy Aces. • The Season 3
Ted Lasso episode "
Signs" sees Rebecca Welton bump into her ex-boyfriend who is referred to as a "shite in nining armor", a spoonerism of "knight in shining armor".
Literature • Comedian F. Chase Taylor was the main actor of the 1930s radio program
Stoopnagle and Budd, in which his character, Colonel Stoopnagle, used spoonerisms. In 1945, he published a book,
My Tale Is Twisted, consisting of 44 "spoonerised" versions of well-known children's stories. Subtitled "Wart Pun: Aysop's Feebles" and "Tart Pooh: Tairy and Other Fales," these included such tales as "Beeping Sleauty" for "
Sleeping Beauty". The book was republished in 2001 by Stone and Scott Publishers as ''Stoopnagle's Tale is Twisted''. • In 2005,
HarperCollins published the late humorist
Shel Silverstein's
Runny Babbit: A Billy Sook, a book about a rabbit whose parents "Dummy and Mad" gave him spoonerized chores, such as having to "Dash the wishes" (for "wash the dishes"). • In his poem "Translation,"
Brian P. Cleary describes a boy named Alex who speaks in spoonerisms (like "shook a tower" instead of "took a shower"). Humorously, Cleary leaves the poem's final spoonerism to the reader when he says: • In
D. H. Lawrence & Susan his Cow (1939), literary critic
William York Tindall described behavioral psychologists as "occupied with nothing more spiritual than pulling habits out of rats". (This quip is commonly cited to
Douglas Bush, who used it in a lecture two years later.)
Crosswords Spoonerisms are used in
cryptic crossword clues and use a
play on words, in which the initial sounds or syllables of two words are switched to provide a solution. The clue type is generally indicated by a direct reference to 'Spooner', or 'Rev', although more tricky examples might use such phrases as 'in a manner of speaking', or 'slip of the tongue', etc. Uniquely, in cryptic crosswords the words used to create the Spoonerism might only be hinted at, not explicitly stated. Example: ''"Spooner's criminal with nurse finding hiding places."'' (4,3,6) Solution: NOOK AND CRANNY (Spoonerism of CROOK AND NANNY).
Music • The title of the
Van der Graaf Generator's 1971 album
Pawn Hearts resulted from a spoonerism by
David Jackson, who said one time: "I'll go down to the studio and dub on some more porn hearts", meaning to say 'horn parts'. • American indie rock musician
Ritt Momney's name is a spoonerism of the name of the American politician
Mitt Romney. • American synthwave musician
Com Truise's name is a spoonerism of the name of American actor
Tom Cruise. • Estonian
complextro musician
Mord Fustang's name is a spoonerism of the well-known
Ford Mustang muscle car. • English rapper
Loyle Carner's stage name is a spoonerism of his
double-barrelled surname Coyle-Larner as well as a reference to his childhood struggle with his
ADHD and
dyslexia diagnoses. • American
mathcore band
The Callous Daoboys is a spoonerism of the
Dallas Cowboys. • Dutch electronic musician
San Holo's name is a spoonerism of the
Star Wars character
Han Solo. This led
Walt Disney Pictures to send a
cease and desist letter for
copyright infringement with potential penalty estimated between $5 million and $10 million. • American
thrash metal band
Metallica released a live concert DVD in 1998, titled
Cunning Stunts, with it being meant as a spoonerism for "stunning cunts". • American hip-hop artist
Tyler, the Creator's
street-wear brand,
Golf Wang, is a spoonerism of LA hip-hop
music collective "
Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All", which he was a former member of. • The title of American
punk rock band
NOFX's fifth studio album,
Punk in Drublic, is a spoonerism of the phrase
"drunk in public".
Radio On the 3 December 1950 episode of
The Jack Benny Program, Jack mentions that he ran into his butler Rochester while in his car that was on a grease rack. Mary Livingston was supposed to say "How could you run into him on a grease rack?" but flubbed her line with "How could you run into him on a grass reek?" The audience laughed so much that Jack was unable to reply as the show ran out of time.
False etymology Spoonerisms are used sometimes in
false etymologies. For example, according to linguist
Ghil'ad Zuckermann, some wrongly believe that the English word
butterfly derives from
utter y. == Scientific research ==