twist Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/twist/ Writing workshops, communication consulting and writing services Thu, 07 Jul 2022 08:43:13 +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 twist Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/twist/ 32 32 65624304 How to play with words https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/06/how-to-play-with-words/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/06/how-to-play-with-words/#respond Tue, 14 Jun 2022 10:50:17 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=29828 Twist a list to add humor to your message

Long ago, on an episode of “The Colbert Report,” Stephen Colbert compared:

Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and the Toyota Camry

He was using a wordplay technique called “twist a list.”… Read the full article

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Twist a list to add humor to your message

Long ago, on an episode of “The Colbert Report,” Stephen Colbert compared:

How to play with words
In a twist Twist a list to develop plays with words. Image by ifong
Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and the Toyota Camry

He was using a wordplay technique called “twist a list.” Think of it as the “One of these things is not like the others” approach.

You can use it, too.

  • Set up your list with two or more serious items that conceptually go together: Christianity, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism, for instance.
  • Add a funny final item that’s not like the others: the Toyota Camry, in this case.

Comedians twist a list to add humor to their routines. Now you can use this approach in your own copy.

List twisting in action

Professional speaker Mary Fisher uses this approach in her keynote, “Humor in the Workplace. She asked the audience to:

Please raise your hand if you feel you have a touch of Humor Deficit Disorder.
Raise your hand if you have to live with someone who has Humor Deficit Disorder.
Raise your hand if you have to work with someone who has Humor Deficit Disorder.
Raise your hand if you have to work with someone who has it, but you can’t raise your hand because he’s sitting next to you now.

In “Kinky Boots,” Lola calls out to:

Ladies and gentlemen … and those who have yet to make up your minds.”

David Dixon won Salon’s Haiku Error Messages challenge with this verse:

Three things are certain:
Death, taxes, and lost data.
Guess which has occurred.

In Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn paints a quick snapshot of a character with this twisted list:

Her bookshelves are stocked with coffee-table crap: The Irish in America. Mizzou Football: A History in Pictures. We Remember 9/11. Something Dumb with Kittens.

Scott Beckett, copy editor for the Corpus Christi Caller-Times, twisted this list to earn an American Copy Editors Society (ACES) headline contest award:

Going once, going twice, going to be confused
Critics of state’s foreclosure auction process call for more accountability, while lenders say the system protects homebuyers

Twist a familiar list.

You can also twist a familiar list for a funny result. William Shakespeare, for instance, wrote:

Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.

Now twist it: “Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some ….” How would you finish that sentence?

How to play with words

Twisting a list is one of a wide variety of word games you can play to turn plain words and phrases into double entendres, puns and other plays on words. How can you make your messages more engaging by playing with your words?

  • 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.”

    Learn to find, develop and write stories that engage readers’ hearts and minds in our Master the Art of Storytelling workshops.

    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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How to write puns: List, rhyme and twist https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/06/how-to-write-puns/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/06/how-to-write-puns/#respond Tue, 14 Jun 2022 10:38:14 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=29825 Choose fluent words for wordplay

When the Federal Trade Commission needed to explain why the agency has decided not to develop a do-not-spam registry — officials feared that spammers would target people on the list — a spokesperson said:

“You’ll be spammed if we do — and spammed if we don’t.”

Read the full article

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Choose fluent words for wordplay

When the Federal Trade Commission needed to explain why the agency has decided not to develop a do-not-spam registry — officials feared that spammers would target people on the list — a spokesperson said:

How to write puns
Twist a phrase with these three steps to better wordplay. Image by domnitsky
“You’ll be spammed if we do — and spammed if we don’t.”

How can you craft such a good pun or play on words? One approach is to list, rhyme and twist. Here’s how:

1. List.

Write down the key or topic words from your article.

Then expand your list. The more words, the better. Try synonyms, antonyms and different forms of your keyword — spam, spams, spammed and spamming, for instance.

Visual Thesaurus and OneLook Reverse Dictionary are great tools for adding words to your list.

2. Rhyme.

Use rhyming dictionaries to find words that sound similar to your keywords. My favorite is RhymeZone.

Keep looking. RhymeZone doesn’t recognize “spammed.” But it did send me to OneLook Dictionary Search for words ending in “ammed.” (Input “*ammed.”)

I searched for one of them — slammed — back at RhymeZone, which gave me this list: crammed, dammed, damned, jammed, rammed, scammed.

Next, find phrases that include those rhyming words at Phrase Thesaurus or ClichéSite.com. In fact, I found another starting point for the FTC sound bite by doing this research:

Publish and be damned.

3. Twist.

Now substitute your key word for the rhyming word. Make it:

Publish and be spammed.

List, rhyme and twist in action.

This approach can result in headlines covering …

… The Chicago’s Ritz-Carlton ranking best hotel in the United States in a reader poll:

How the Ritz Was One

… A couple of new movie theaters being built in the same neighborhood:

Coming soon: Two theaters near you

… Turbulent Spanish elections:

New Reign in Spain

… A consultant hiring a personal trainer after he hit a plateau working out on his own:

My muscles, so to speak, had grown accustomed to the pace.

… A blistering (and bearish) week in August:

It’s Not the Heat, It’s the Economy

The launch of Playboy.com:

Silly Rabbit, These Clicks Aren’t For Kids

Choose fluent words.

The best words to play with are fluent words — that is, they’re short (one syllable’s best), sweet and easy to pronounce.

That’s why the first step in wordplay is to expand your word list by finding related words. For a story on how to manage your inheritance without making common missteps, for instance, the word in my head was “inherit” — not very fluent. So I ran it through OneLook Reverse Dictionary and landed on the word “heir.”

Now, “heir” may be one of the best words to play with in the English language. That’s because “heir”:

  • Is a homophone that sounds like err and air. That makes it easy to sub a soundalike, like:
Err apparent
  • Looks as if it sounds like hair, which makes it easy to list and twist:
Bad hair day
  • Rhymes with dozens of words, including care, dare, fair, pair, prayer, rare, scare, share and their — all good candidates for listing, rhyming and twisting.
  • Looks as if it could be pronounced here, which allows more listing and twisting:
Heir today, gone tomorrow
  • Is short, sweet and easy to pronounce.

Don’t wait for the muse.

Some lucky communicators are natural-born phrase twisters. I have to substitute systems and processes for talent.

If you’re like me, list, rhyme and twist key words in your next story for a sassy sound bite or surprising headline.

  • 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.”

    Learn to find, develop and write stories that engage readers’ hearts and minds in our Master the Art of Storytelling workshops.

    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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