Lapsus

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A lapsus (lapse, slip, error) is an involuntary mistake made while writing or speaking. According to Freud's early psychoanalytic theory, a lapsus represents a missed deed that hides an unconscious desire.

In literature there are a number of different lapsus depending on the mode of correspondence:

[edit] Types of slips of the tongue

Slips of the tongue can happen on any level:

  • Syntactic - is instead of was.
  • Phrasal slips of tongue - I'll explain this tornado later.
  • Lexical/semantic - moon full instead of full moon.
  • Morphological level - workings paper
  • Phonological (sound slips) - flow snurries instead of snow flurries

Additionally, each of these five levels of error may take various forms:

  • Anticipations: Where an early output item is corrupted by an element belonging to a later one. Thus "reading list" - "leading list".
  • Perseverations: Where a later output item is corrupted by an element belonging to an earlier one. Thus "waking rabbits" - "waking wabbits".
  • Deletions: Where an output element is somehow totally lost. Thus "same state" - "same sate".
  • Shift: Moving a letter. Thus "black foxes" - "back floxes".
  • Haplologies:[1] half one word and half the other. Thus "stummy" instead of "stomach or tummy". (Smith, 2003)[volume & issue needed]
  • Pun

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ This is a different phenomenon to that described in the main article on haplologies, which involves the removal of identical consecutive syllables.
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