“Malaprop“
The mistaken use of a word in place of a similar sounding one, often with unintentionally
amusing effect, as in, for example, “dance a flamingo” (instead of flamenco).
Today’s posting will be a shout out to all of those educators that spend so much of their time attempting to teach our younger generations anything. It’s a difficult job on the good days and it’s even worse on the bad days. I thought I’d list a selection of what are called malaprops taken from actual test papers and essays from some grade schoolers, high schoolers, and selected college examinations. These are things of beauty.
- Women like to do things in circles, where they sew, talk, and do their meddling.
- “Don’t” is a contraption.
- Italics are what Italians write in.
- The government of Athens was Democratic because the people took the law into their own hands.
- Antarctica is like the regular Arctic, but ritzier.
- He worked in the government as a civil serpent.
- You purify water by filtering it and then forcing it through an aviator.
- The doctor felt the man’s purse and said there was no hope.
- The government of England is a limited mockery.
- The first book of the Bible is a book of Guinness’s.


