| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 221.1 | I wouldn't have known either: what pun? | ECCGY4::BARTA | Gabriel Barta/ESPRIT/Intl Eng/Munich | Sat Jul 19 1986 16:06 | 0 | 
| 221.2 | Not a pun | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Notable notes from -bs- | Mon Jul 21 1986 09:15 | 14 | 
|  |     RE: .0                  
    
    Your example is not a pun; it's just using the wrong word (in this
    case, saying the opposite of what the speaker actually meant).
    
    A pun is a play on words. In most cases a pun involves using two
    words that are similar in sound, but have different meanings. The
    humor of a pun comes from the ambiguity between the meaning and
    the sound.
    
    -bs
    Punster par excellence.
    
    PS - This note contains no puns.
 | 
| 221.3 | At the wake of .0s pun | ALIEN::MCCARTHY |  | Mon Jul 21 1986 18:30 | 18 | 
|  |     re: .0 I beg to differ:
    
    	From the American Heritage Dictionary (It's close by)
    
    	Wake:1) The visible track left by something, as a ship, passing
                through water.
             2) The track or course left behind by something that has passed.
    
    	Pun:    A humorous use of a word involving two interpretations
                of the meaning.
    
    The reporter used precisely the word he meant, and correctly, in
    stating that residents who remembered recent rains no longer thought
    they had a drought when in fact they did. Now if one considers the
    first meaning of wake in that sentence ...
    
    							-Brian
    
 | 
| 221.4 | Driven by a little old lady... | ARGUS::CORWIN | Jill Corwin | Thu Jul 24 1986 14:45 | 6 | 
|  | I saw the following sign in the middle of a row of cars at a used car dealer:
"Check out our used car line"
Jill
 | 
| 221.5 | From the newspapers: | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Fri Aug 01 1986 10:05 | 5 | 
|  | "Sale on inflatable toys!  Slashed beyond belief!"
				-- San Francisco Chronicle
"Escaped Leopard Believed Spotted"
				-- Srpingfield (Mass.) Union
 | 
| 221.6 | The competition could get slushy, I suppose... | CHUCKM::MURRAY | Chuck Murray | Mon Jan 12 1987 10:40 | 6 | 
|  | From the AP business news:
    
"'Making its products more nutritious is one strategy Popsicle is
taking as competition becomes increasingly stiff in the frozen
novelty market,' said Paul Kadin, Popsicle's vice president of
marketing."
 | 
| 221.7 | It's not a real word, is it? | STAR::CANTOR | IM2BZ2P | Wed Feb 13 1991 06:00 | 9 | 
|  | A friend of mine was talking tonight about people who go to work on
Antarctica, and how after they are dropped off, they feel isolated.
Of course, strange person that I am, I started chuckling.  No one else
heard anything funny and I got a strange look or two.  I had to explain
that I thought it was an unintentional pun:  I heard 'isolated' as
'icillated'.
Dave C.
 | 
| 221.8 |  | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Aug 22 1994 09:50 | 5 | 
|  | In this morning's paper there's a story about a prisoner who allegedly shot
a policeman with the latter's gun.  The prisoner was injured also.
	"Garcia [the prisoner] was taken to BCH [Boston City Hospital]
	and was listed in guarded condition..."
 |