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ABOUT One Pun

The juciest puns available

Welcome! As our name suggests, we post exactly one pun every single day! Usually...

Due to this lack of consistency in puns posted, puns may be posted twice a day to make up for the lack of them.


Homophonic pun:
This type of pun uses homonyms (words that sound the same) with different meanings. For example: “The wedding was so emotional that even the cake was in tiers.” The professor Walter Redfern said of this type of pun, “To pun is to treat homonyms as synonyms.”

Homographic pun:
This type of pun uses words that are spelled the same but sound different. These puns are often written rather than spoken, as they briefly trick the reader into reading the “wrong” sound. For example, “You can tune a guitar, but you can’t tuna fish. Unless you play bass.” In this case, “tuna fish” is a homophonic pun because it is a homonym for “tune a.” The word “bass,” though, functions as a homographic pun in that the word “bass” pronounced with a long “a” refers to a type of instrument while “bass” pronounced with a short “a” is a type of fish.

Homonymic pun:
A homonymic pun contains aspects of both the homophonic pun and the homographic pun. In this type of pun, the wordplay involves a word that is spelled and sounds the same, yet has different meanings. For example, “Two silk worms had a race and ended in a tie.” A “tie” can of course either be when neither party wins, but in this pun also refers to the piece of clothing usually made from silk.

Compound pun:
A compound pun includes more than one pun. Here is a famous compound pun from English rhetorician and theologian Richard Whately: “Why can a man never starve in the Great Desert? Because he can eat the sand which is there. But what brought the sandwiches there? Why, Noah sent Ham, and his descendants mustered and bred.” There are several separate puns, including the pun on “sand which” and “sandwich,” as well as “Ham” (a Biblical figure) and “ham” and the homophonic puns on “mustered”/“mustard” and “bred”/“bread.”

Recursive Pun:
is one in which the second aspect of a pun relies on the understanding of an element in the first. For example, Oscar Wilde's quote "Immanuel doesn't pun, he Kant". In this instance, you have to know who Immanuel Kant is to understand the statement.

Visual Pun:
Using a picture to convey the pun is quite popular nowadays. Usually, logos, emblems, symbols, and other graphic elements are utilized to put the message across to the reader.


Find out more at:
http://www.punfusion.com/whats-a-pun.html
http://www.literarydevices.com/pun/
http://www.buzzle.com/articles/pun-examples.html

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You wanna hear a funny joke?
The Daily Pun #249
5 Comments
wrglmczslzf Jan 12, 2016 @ 1:27am 
So could someone explain the wedding one? Thanks!
Magnificent One Dec 22, 2015 @ 11:53pm 
Why? They're just practicing their scales.
Jovial Bard Dec 19, 2015 @ 11:25am 
I think bass players are really fishy.
ww Oct 14, 2015 @ 8:01pm 
A pun a day keeps the doctor away!
ww Oct 13, 2015 @ 4:07pm 
I am a big dill! *winks* (saw it on a folder)
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Founded
June 6, 2015