<pre>
Q: List some oronyms (phrases or sentences that can be read in two ways
with the same sound).


A: The word "oronym" was coined by Gyles Brandreth, The Joy of Lex,
William Morrow, New York, 1980.  Such phrases are also call
"mondegreens" or "junctures."

Phrases:
<pre>
    a name		an aim
    a nice chest	an ice chest
    a notion		an ocean
    append		up end
    bang cat		bank at
    be quiet		Beek Wyatt
    bean ice		be nice
    beast of burden	pizza burnin'
    bee feeder		beef eater
    beer drips		beard rips
    buys ink		buy zinc
    Caesar		seize her
    catch it		cat shit
    catch ooze		cat chews
    Cato		Kay toe
    cedar fences	sea defences
    cider		sight or
    damn pegs		damp eggs
    field red		feel dread
    forced air		four stair
    fork reeps		four creeps
    form ate		four mate
    freed Annie		free Danny
    giant size		giant's eyes
    grade A		gray day
    grasp rice		grass price
    great ape		grey tape
    her butter		herb utter
    hiatus		Hy ate us
    history		his story
    homemaker		hoe-maker
    I scream		ice cream
    I stink		iced ink
    it sprays		it's praise
    it swings		its wings
    kaleidoscope eye	colitis goes by
    keep sticking	keeps ticking
    known ocean		no notion
    lawn chair		launch air
    London derriere	Londonderry Aire
    massive		mass of
    may cough		make off
    Mikey's		my keys
    music album		musical bum
    new Deal		nude eel
    new development	nuder velopment
    new direction	nude erection
    night rate		nitrate
    pawn shop		paunch op
    peace talks		pea stalks
    Pete's mother	Pete smother
    pierced ears	peer steers
    pinch air		pin chair
    play taught		plate ought
    plum pie		plump eye
    scar face		scarf ace
    seal eyeing		see lying
    see Mabel		seem able
    see the meat	see them eat
    seize ooze		see zoos
    sick squid		six quid
    sixty sick sheep	sixty-six sheep
    slide rule		sly drool
    standards-based	standard-spaced
    stay dill		stayed ill
    that's tough	that stuff
    the suns rays meet	the sons raise meat
    thing call		think all
    tour an		two ran
    tulips		two lips
    twenty six ones	twenty sick swans
    we'll own		we loan
    well done other	weld another
    white shoes		why choose
    yelp at		yell Pat
    your crimes		York rhymes
    outh read		you thread
</pre>

Sentences:
<pre>
    And ~[[laid him on the green/Lady Mondegreen]].
    Any ~[[grey day/grade A]] would be bad news for one professor I know.
    Are you aware of the words you have ~[[just uttered / just stuttered]]?
    Eugene O'Neill won a ~[[Pulitzer Prize / pullet surprise]].
    Gladly, the ~[[cross-eyed / cross I'd]] bear.
    ~[[He's had an attack / He sat on a tack]].
    He's a relic of the ~[[dock cages / Dark Ages]].
    He would kill Hamlet for ~[[that reason / that treason]].
    How did you do in the ~[[contest / Kant test]]?
    I don't know how ~[[mature/much your]] people enjoy such a show.
    I have ~[[known oceans/no notions]] that you yourself couldn't imagine.
    I like ~[[sadder day/ Saturday]].
    If it keeps on ~[[it singes its wings / its hinges, it swings]].
    If you listen you can hear the ~[[night rain / night train]].
    I'll ~[[leave 'n' / even]] say goodbye.
    I'm taking ~[[a nice / an ice]] cold shower.
    It's a ~[[dog eat dog / doggy-dog]] world.
    It's a ~[[Grade A / grey day]] today.
    It's hard to ~[[recognize speech / wreck a nice beach]].
    ~[[Michael / Mike will]] row the boat ashore.
    Oh, no====  ~[[This guy/The sky]] is falling!
====
    On the coastline they are strengthening the ~[[cedar fences / sea defences]].
    ~[[Pinch her ear / Pinch her rear]].
    She's now in the ~[[low weighties / low eighties]].
    ~[[Some others / Some mothers]] I've seen.
    That is ~[[all most / almost]] interesting.
    That reflects the ~[[secretariat's sphere / secretariat's fear]] of competence.
    That's the ~[[biggest hurdle / biggest turtle]] I've ever seen====
====
    The cost ~[[of futilities / of utilities]] is to high.
    The Focus Farm is where the ~[[sun's rays meet / sons raise meat]].
    The girl with ~[[kaleidoscope eyes/ colitis goes by]].
    The good ~[[can decay many ways / candy came anyways]].
    ~[[The sky / This guy]] is falling.
    The ~[[stuffy nose / stuff he knows]] can lead to problems.
    They played the Bohemian ~[[Rhapsody / Rap City]].
    We ~[[needed a cantor / need a decanter]].
    Where is the ~[[spice center / spy center]]?
    ~[[White shoes: / Why choose]] the trademark of Pat Boone~[[./?]]
    You'd be surprised to see a ~[[mint spy / mince pie]] in your bank.
</pre>

See also:
<pre>
    [[Malaprop]]
    [[Telegrams]]
</pre>

References:

<pre>
    Barry, W J, 1981, Internal Juncture and Speech Communication,
    Arbeitsberichte.  Institut fu"r Phonetik.  University of Kiel.  Vol 16.

    Brandreth, Giles, ''The Joy of Lex'', 1980, New York: William Morrow and Co.,
    pp. 58-59, who coined the word "oronym"

    Cutler & Butterfield, Rhythmic Cues to Speech Segmentation.  Evidence
    from juncture misperception, 1992, Journal of Memory and Language, Vol
    31(2) 218-236  Provides materials in context frames where the
    alternative segmentations lead to one Vs two word parsings: in furs Vs
    infers.

    Fowkes, Robert A., Juncture: Where It Sat, Verbatim, VI-2, Autumn 1979

    Grice, Martine and Hazan, Valerie, 1989, The assessment of synthetic
    speech intelligibility using semantically unpredictable sentences,
    Speech, Hearing and Language, Work in Progress, University College
    London. The inferior quality of the synthetic speech often caused more
    than one type of error at once (bright eye -> dry tie).

    Hoard, James E., `Juncture and syllable structure', Phonetica 15,
    1966, 96-109

    Hockett, Charles F. Hockett, ''A Course in Modern Linguistics'', New York:
    Macmillan, 1958, 54-61

    Lehiste, Ilse.  1960.  An acoustic-phonetic study of internal open
    juncture.  Phonetica 5 (supplement). pp. 5-54.

    Nakatani L.  H.  & Dukes, K.D., 1977, Locus of Segmental Cues to Word
    Juncture, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol 62, pp
    714-719 and

    Price P, Ostendorf M, Shattuck-Huffnagel S & Fong C (1991) "The use of
    prosody in syntactic disambibuation" JASA 90 (6) pp2956-2970. It has
    some good examples,
</pre>
</pre>
