-ROGER ROSENBLATT
It’s very natural to commit mistakes. In this essay the writer gives the examples of great or big persons to show that the
tongue slips are not only done by normal people but also done even by great or
big persons of higher status.
Types of Tongue Slips:
- Mistranslation: mistake in translation
- Spoonerism (the transposition/substitution of sounds to each other/ accidental verbal error): an accidental transposition of initial consonant sounds or parts of words, especially one that has an amusing result, for example, “half-warmed fish” for “half-formed wish.”
- Bloopers: Public blunder: spoken wrong in radio, press, etc.
- Faux pas: tactless mistake
Why do we laugh?
- To discover the hidden motive of the speaker.
- Relief by a change.
Oops!
How’s That Again, written by Roger Rosenblatt tries to reflect the bitter reality of
human beings when they make mistakes while speaking. The essay deals with the
mistakes people make when speaking and the reasons why they make mistakes. As a
natural trait (characteristic), everybody makes mistakes. Some mistakes are
easy to take whereas others are not. This essay is written in a humorous tone
with various remarkable examples to elaborate and expand writer's opinion.
Human beings often make mistake knowingly and unknowingly when they speak.
After making mistake they also apologize for it too. This type of mistake is
committed by every kind of people. From an uneducated person to highly
intellectual and educated, scholar, different mistakes are made according to
their level. This essay is mainly focused with the mistake of people when they
speak. Sometimes such verbal errors have devastating effect on both speaker and
listener. These kinds of mistakes are generally caused due to slips of tongue, poor translations, or sound confusion. To elaborate the
reasons of such mistakes in detail the writer has also describes the reasons of
these mistakes from linguistic and psychological point of view.
- Public
Blunders
- Memorable
Translations
- Bloopers
(an embarrassing mistake)
- Spoonerisms
(slips of tongue)
Public Blunders (Faux pas) are the
mistakes made by the people when they give speech. This type of mistake usually
occurs when a person says something that he thinks harmless. But is actually
has a meaning which upsets the speaker as well as the listeners. While
delivering the speech, they don’t actually care for the grammatical mistakes or
vocabulary mistakes. The political leaders specially commit these mistakes when
they deliver their speech. They try to give emphasis by giving different
examples but their sentences are not totally complete. This happens due to
their tongue slip. Here the speaker may be trying to give message from one view
but the different audience may take it in wrong way.
Mistranslations are the mistakes generally done
by the people who speak very fast. This is also related to the psychological
condition of the listener. The words spoken by the fast speaker may not be
easily understood the real words. There may be misunderstanding between the speaker
and listener. This type of mistake is also made when the text of a language is
badly translated into another language.
Bloopers are the mistakes done
foolishly and not tried to correct. These mistakes are very simple types of
mistakes, which are not given much importance by the speaker. This may be the
habit of some people. Spoonerisms (slips
of the tongue) are the mistakes, which are done by the use of incorrect words
due to slips of tongue. In such mistake, the speaker tells one thing when he
means to say another or something else. Here, the listener does not know wrong
words as the speaker immediately tries to replace the wrong word when he comes
to know the mistake. While the replacement of words the speaker should be
conscious as wrong replacement can misinterpret the actual meaning.
Quoting the mistakes because slip of tongue, the writer mentions that in
a Royal Luncheon is Glasgow; a businessman wished Prince Charles a long and
happy conjugal life with Lady Jane instead of Lady Diana. In Chicago, the
governor of Illinois was introduced as mayor of Illinois and again as governor
of America. While giving the examples of faux pas the writer mentions that once
Nancy Regon describes the voters as
‘the beautiful white people’ ignoring the black people present there which put
her in very difficult situation. The French prime minister while condemning a
bomb attack once said that the bomb was aimed at Jews but it struck the
innocent Frenchmen. It meant that the Jews in France weren’t Frenchmen and they
weren’t innocent either. Mistranslation is also the cause of verbal error.
Pepsi’s advertisement “Come alive with Pepsi” was mistranslated into German
language as “Come alive out of the grave with Pepsi”. German prime minister
once asked Indian president “Who are you?” instead of “How are you?” while
receiving him at the airport.
Spoonerism began with William Archibald Spooner when he chided (scolded) his
students as “You hissed all my mystery lecture, you haveve tasted the whole
worm...drain”. He meant to say as, “You’ve missed all my history lectures and you
have wasted the whole term...down train”.
Although these mistakes are funny to us, linguists and psychologists
take these mistakes seriously. Victoria
Fromkin, a linguist calls the mistakes clues to how the brain stores and
articulates language. Other linguists suggest that the mistake expresses the
mis-speaker’s inner thought. Psychologist Ludwig says the verbal mistake occurs
because of human id, ego and super ego.
Verbal mistakes always tell us about the logic and possibility behind
them. We always laugh when people make mistakes. Sometimes, we find mistakes
funny because of being mean. But sometimes we laugh at verbal mistake because
we feel sympathy as we all make mistakes.
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