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User:RD/9k/root word mirage (Q51,30)

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Main entry

  1. root-word mirage / root word mirage (searchable) / name-element mirage / reading meaningful name elements out of the wrong names -> something of an arts trope. usually harmless. the only exception to that might be everyday instances of somebody reading a Chinese or Vietnamese name as "dung", etc. most of the time it's just funny, like Edward being a direction? gold. wondering if Oliver Wood is a beating stick? dark, but fine. turning the name Rowling into some dumb pun about rolling downhill and being unable to stop? perfect. I'd say that a name like "Darkstalker" doesn't fit into this motif because it's made of words that already have multiple meanings on their own. this motif is more like a frame shift mutation for words.

Sub-cases

  1. Squidward is a direction / Directional words end in -ward, therefore Squidward is a direction, and so are its original counterparts Edward, Hayward, and Siegward -> very silly, one of those things that normally you wouldn't think about for more than a minute, but does wrap around to being interesting in the context of "language games". you can't just make signifiers mean anything because to some extent there are reasons they mean the things they currently mean.
  2. "Hogwarts" is a direction [1] -> I have no idea if this is intentional or this is the same statement as "Squidward is a direction".
    arguments in favor: "hog" could be read as rightwards depending on the language. if that's true.... oh boy, it really doesn't look good for the meaning of the books does it? like, Hogwarts would be the same thing as the bad meaning of "redpilled".
  3. comrade page [2] [3] [4] -> I was looking for an abbreviation for "Ontology talk". nothing was standing out at me until I saw the related Irish and Scottish words comhrá and còmhradh and started laughing. they do not come from the same etymology as comrade. it's com (with/together) + hrá (speak), a lot like Latin words are formed, while "comrade" comes from room. I still can't help but find it funny that the word looks like that though. "EC" it is.

Related

  1. let's eat grandpa / the first Undertale ever received / please workers only (sign installed in public place which appears to be an instruction to only obey workers) / Trotsky helped lay the foundations of the Third International galvanizing parties around the world / (9k)
  2. fruit flies like a banana / stroked his lover with the edge of a knife / cellar filled with wine and spirits, but not a bottle to be seen (Dr. Faustroll)
  3. assigned harpoon at birth (Ahab) / Land Gay Before Time / Lesbian Gay Pikachu Eevee / Lesbian Gay Bacon Lettuce Tomato (South Park) / Maoist who Loves Men (MLM) / mainstream men (MSM) / Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trotsky / Liberal, Gay, Bisexual, Trotsky / Communist Product Category; Communist Party of China codes (CPC codes) [5] -> the motif of accidentally reading acronyms that have nothing to do with gender / LGBT+ as "definitely" being a strange new variation of an LGBT+ acronym. not to be confused with acrostics where a word is simply structuring an arbitrary set of words. this is when two actual acronyms collide and people start reading one of them as the other even if they aren't exactly the same
  4. Lesbian Gay Bacon Tomato / Communist Product Category; Communist Party of China codes (CPC codes) [6] [7] -> I was trying to read a page about the BISAC book code system and they never defined what "CPC codes" were so I was really really confused what that could possibly be. not to mention how surreal it was to see "evangelical Christians" using anything called "CPC codes", like they've gotta answer to the Communist International to keep from being revisionist or something, or China becoming this weird brake on what content can be put in Disney movies got way out of hand. my best plausible guess was "Christian publisher codes". but it turned out to be "Christian product category".

Ideology codes

  • HAS / linguistics
  • ES / linguistics
  • Aa / Lacanianism