play merriam-webster eggcorns title page
Usage Notes

What Is an Eggcorn?

And how did it get that name?


How did eggcorn become the term used to describe a word or phrase that sounds correct but is the result of a mishearing? Senior Editor Emily Brewster explains.
Some of our favorite eggcorns include for all intensive purposes, would just assume, and hunger pains.

Transcript

An eggcorn is a word or phrase that sounds right and seems to make sense, but is the result of a mishearing. Linguist Geoff Pullum came up with the term inspired by the use of eggcorn to mean acorn. It may be like an oak tree's egg, but it's not an eggcorn. It's an acorn.

Up next

play merriam-webster eggcorns title page
What Is an Eggcorn?

 

And how did it get that name?

play mrs malaprop
What is a Malaprop?

 

We'll tell you all the perpendiculars

play video websters video of 1864
Webster's Dictionary of 1864

 

The landmark edition that transformed the way dictionaries are made.

play body parts video
When Body Parts Are Also Verbs

 

Head, shoulders, metaphors, and toes

play alright allright video
Alright vs. All Right

 

Is 'alright' all right?

play video title words of the year 1066
Words of the Year: 1066

 

English was never the same after the Norman Conquest