alliteration Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/alliteration/ Writing workshops, communication consulting and writing services Tue, 09 Mar 2021 06:36:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.wyliecomm.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-wci-favico-1-32x32.gif alliteration Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/alliteration/ 32 32 65624304 Why wordplay works in communications https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/03/why-wordplay-works-in-communications/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/03/why-wordplay-works-in-communications/#respond Tue, 02 Mar 2021 10:42:26 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=25853 We pay attention to and remember puns, alliteration

A hand shoots up in my Make Your Copy More Creative workshop.

“But,” the communicator says, “don’t you risk confusing people with wordplay?”… Read the full article

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We pay attention to and remember puns, alliteration

A hand shoots up in my Make Your Copy More Creative workshop.

Why wordplay works in communications
Your brain on wordplay Wordplay changes readers’ minds and moves them to act. So why not add wordplay to your message today? Image by Serhii Khanas

“But,” the communicator says, “don’t you risk confusing people with wordplay?”

Well … yes, you do. And that’s part of the point.

When readers encounter wordplay, they first try on the literal meaning of the words. When that doesn’t work, they seek alternative meanings.

Because readers spend extra time and attention on wordplay (PDF), they understand it more fully and remember it longer.

Your brain on wordplay - Broca area
Center of attention The Broca area is the part of your brain responsible for processing language — or not. Image by Henry Vandyke Carter via Wikimedia Commons

And that’s just one benefit of wordplay. Among others:

1. Wordplay grabs attention.

Meet your Broca area — a small part of your brain located in the frontal lobe of your left cerebral hemisphere. It’s your body’s language control center.

You can thank your Broca for helping you sort through the 5,000 messages you get every day — that’s nearly 2 million a year — PLUS social media, without having to process every word.

Remember that old Far Side cartoon by Gary Larson?

What we say to dogs: “Okay, Ginger! I’ve had it! You stay out of the garbage! Understand, Ginger? Stay out of the garbage, or else!
What dogs hear: “Blah blah Ginger blah blah blah blah blah blah Ginger blah blah blah blah blah.”

Your Broca is Ginger: not paying much attention to most messages — until something interesting comes along.

Well-worn phrases like “a rough day” are so familiar they don’t activate your Broca. Plain old splainin’ doesn’t do anything for it either. Why even bother decoding those words into meaning?

But puns and other wordplay activate Broca’s area.

Want folks to pay attention to your message (PDF)? Activate their Brocas with wordplay.

2. Wordplay is more fun.

Figuring out a pun is a little like figuring out a riddle or solving The New York Times crossword puzzle. It’s fun! It also feels good to figure out a twist of phrase.

Call it “the pleasure of the text,” the reward that readers get from figuring out figurative language. When readers discover the hidden meaning behind your wordplay, they congratulate themselves on their astuteness.

3. Wordplay feels good.

And when that twist of phrase tickles your readers’ funny bones, their brains deliver a dose of dopamine. Then, if you really crack up, neurons called spindle cells spread the joy across the brain.

4. Wordplay changes minds.

The good feeling readers get from figuring out puns and other plays on words also helps create a positive attitude toward your message. That puts readers in an agreeable mood and may even open their minds to your message.

In fact, ads using rhetorical techniques were 166% more likely to persuade readers (PDF) than ads that did not, according to two researchers from the California State University at Sacramento. They correlated ads with figurative language in Which Ad Pulled Best against results.

Move readers to act

Rhetorical ads are more persuasive
One to remember Readers are twice as likely to remember and act on ads with rhetorical figures than those without, according to two researchers from California State University at Sacramento.

5. Wordplay is more memorable.

“Words that roll off the tongue stay in the brain,” says Sam Horn, author of Pop!: Stand Out in Any Crowd.

Indeed.

Those two Sac State researchers also found that ads using rhetorical techniques were 229% more likely to be remembered than ads that did not.

And, in another study, four researchers had half their participants read alliterative passages and other half read plain-old passages. Those who read the alliterative passages remembered more of what they’d read than the control group.

Play to win.

Want readers to pay attention to, enjoy, remember and act on your messages? Try wordplay.

  • Master the Art of Storytelling - Ann Wylie's creative-content workshop

    How can you tell better business stories?

    Stories are so effective that Og Mandino, the late author of the bestselling The Greatest Salesman in the World, says, “If you have a point, find a story.”

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    There, you’ll learn how to find the aha! moment that’s the gateway to every anecdote. How to start an anecdote with a bang — instead of a whimper. And how to use “the most powerful form of human communication” to grab attention, boost credibility, make messages more memorable and communicate better.

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Sources: “Awesome Alliteration Analysis Posits Power Of Poetry And Prose,” Scientific Blogging, July 30, 2008

Cristen Conger, “Is there a scientific formula for funny?” How Stuff Works, June 7, 2011

Francisco Javier Díaz-Pérez, “The use of wordplay in advertisements published in men’s magazines: a comparative study in the UK and Spain” (PDF), Estudios Ingleses de la Universidad Complutense, 2012, vol. 20, pp. 11-36

David Glen Mick and Edward F. McQuarrie, “Figures of Rhetoric in Advertising Language” (PDF), Journal Of Consumer Research, March 1996

Stefan Kjerkegaard, “Seven Days Without a Pun Makes One Weak: Two Functions of Wordplay in Literature and Literary Theory,” Journal of Literature, Language and Linguistics, Volume 3, Issue 1, 2011

Gail Tom and Anmarie Eves, “The Use of Rhetorical Devices in Advertising,” Journal of Advertising Research, July-August 1999

Leo Widrich, “The Science of Storytelling,” Daily Good, Feb. 21, 2013

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