Siamese twins (linguistics)

The expression "hammer and sickle" is a Siamese twin. The order of the two keys words of this familiar expression cannot be reversed.

Siamese twins (also irreversible binomials,[1] binomials,[1] binomial pairs, freezes) in the context of the English language is a pair or grouping of words used together as an idiomatic expression or collocation, usually conjoined by the words and or or. The order of elements cannot be reversed.[1] The expressions hammer and sickle (two nouns), short and sweet (two adjectives), and sink or swim (two verbs) are various examples of Siamese twins.

Some English words are known to have become obsolete in general but are still found exclusively in an irreversible binomial. In the passage of time since spick and span was coined, the origin and meaning of the word spick has been utterly forgotten; it has become a fossil word that never appears outside the familiar phrase.[2] In other cases an English word (like vim in vim and vigor or the abet in aid and abet) will be found more often in such phrases than on its own; such a word may be archaic apart from the collocation.

Many Siamese twins are "catchy" (and thus clichés and catchphrases) due to alliteration, rhyming, or their ubiquity in society and culture. Word combinations like rock and roll, the birds and the bees, mix and match, and wear and tear have become so widely used that their meanings surpass the meaning of the constituent words and are thus inseparable and permanent parts of the English lexicon; the former two are idioms, whilst the latter two are collocations. Ubiquitous collocations like loud and clear and life or death are fixed expressions, making them a standard part of the vocabulary of native English speakers.

A few Siamese twins have variations, based on the usage of the phrase. One time-worn expression is time and time again: it is frequently shortened to time and again. Rhythm and blues and peanut butter and jelly are both frequently abbreviated: R&B and PB&J.

Origin

The term Siamese twins originates with Chang and Eng Bunker, the conjoined twins from Siam. In the context of the English language, this word was first used and popularised by H. W. Fowler, a renowned lexicographer.

Conjunction

The most common conjunctions used in a phrase that constitutes Siamese twins are and or or.

With "and" as the conjunction <span id="Examples of Siamese twins with "and" as the conjunction">

With "or" or "nor" as the conjunction <span id="Examples of Siamese twins with "or" or "nor" or as the conjunction">

  • all or nothing
  • better or worse
  • big or small
  • the chicken or the egg
  • day or night
  • dead or alive
  • do or die
  • fight or flight
  • (neither) fish nor fowl
  • give or take[1]
  • good or bad
  • gentle or simple
  • heads or tails
  • (come) hell or high water
  • (neither) here nor there
  • (neither) hide nor hair
  • hit or miss
  • (not one) jot or tittle
  • kill or cure
  • kill or be killed
  • (neither) love nor money
  • make or break[1]
  • more or less
  • rain or shine
  • sink or swim
  • sooner or later
  • take it or leave it
  • two or more
  • up or down
  • (neither) use nor ornament
  • victory or death
  • win or lose
  • yes or no

Structure

The structure of any Siamese twins phrase has words that are related in some way. The words constituting a Siamese twins phrase may be synonyms, antonyms, include alliterations or similar-sounding words that often rhyme. Other varieties of Siamese twins may also be possible.

Examples below are split into various tables; some may belong in more than one table but are listed only once.

With opposites and antonyms

  • addition and subtraction
  • assets and liabilities[1]
  • back and forth
  • balls and strikes
  • beginning to end
  • black and white
  • big and small
  • boys and girls
  • bride and groom
  • brother and sister
  • butt and pass
  • buy and sell
  • catch and release
  • church and state
  • cops and robbers
  • coming and going
  • cowboys and Indians
  • days and nights
  • deep and wide
  • dos and don'ts
  • dusk till dawn
  • ebb and flow
  • expressed or implied
  • fire and ice
  • floor to ceiling
  • food and drink
  • fore and aft
  • foreign and domestic
  • forward and backward
  • friend or foe
  • front to back
  • give and take
  • good and evil
  • hand and foot
  • head over heels[1]
  • Heaven and Hell
  • here and there
  • hide and seek
  • hill and dale
  • high crimes and misdemeanours
  • him and her
  • high and low
  • hips and valleys
  • his and hers
  • hither and thither
  • hot and cold
  • hurry up and wait
  • in and out
  • ladies and gentlemen
  • land and sea
  • life or death
  • long and short
  • lost and found
  • love and hate
  • love and war
  • man and wife
  • mom and pop
  • naughty or nice
  • near and far
  • night and day (difference)
  • nip and tuck
  • north to south
  • now and then
  • now and later
  • on and off
  • open and shut
  • over and under
  • park and ride
  • pen and ink
  • port and starboard
  • pros and cons
  • rank and file
  • savings and loan
  • in sickness and in health
  • soap and water
  • start to finish
  • strike and dip
  • sweet and sour
  • stop and go
  • the quick and the dead
  • thick and thin
  • tip and ring
  • to and fro
  • top to bottom
  • town and country
  • up and down
  • ups and downs
  • uptown and downtown
  • victory and defeat
  • war and peace[1]
  • washer and dryer
  • wax and wane
  • yes and no

With related words and synonyms

  • ages and generations
  • aid and abet
  • aid and comfort
  • brick and mortar
  • by hook or by crook
  • cease and desist
  • cheek by jowl
  • clean and tidy
  • (this) day and age
  • dot the i's and cross the t's
  • first and foremost
  • hand over fist
  • haughty and high minded
  • head and shoulders
  • heart and soul
  • herbs and spices
  • house and home
  • hunger and thirst
  • leaps and bounds
  • marque and reprisal
  • neat and tidy
  • six of one,
    half a dozen of the other
  • nook and cranny
  • No quarter. No mercy.
  • null and void
  • over and done with[1]
  • pain and suffering
  • peace and quiet
  • pick and choose
  • (on) pins and needles
  • plain and simple
  • prim and proper
  • rocks and shoals
  • nickel and dime
  • dollars and cents
  • rant and rave
  • shock and awe
  • signs and wonders
  • skull and bones
  • Skull and crossbones
  • strait and narrow
  • ticks and chiggers
  • wind and rain
  • yea and amen

With alliteration

  • bag and baggage[1]
  • baubles and beads
  • beams and balance
  • bed and breakfast[1]
  • belt and braces
  • big and bad
  • the birds and the bees
  • black and blue
  • bold and beautiful
  • bootleggers and Baptists
  • boxers or briefs
  • bread and butter
  • bull and boar
  • butts and bounds
  • cash and carry
  • chalk and cheese
  • cliques and clans
  • command and control
  • cookies and cream
  • deaf and dumb
  • (between the) devil and the deep blue sea
  • dine and dash
  • down and dirty
  • dribs and drabs
  • drink and drive
  • drunk and disorderly
  • Dungeons and Dragons
  • fast and furious
  • feast or famine
  • fire and faggot
  • flip-flop
  • flora and fauna
  • forgive and forget
  • form and function
  • footloose and fancy free
  • friend or foe
  • fun and frolics
  • fur and feathers
  • ghosts and goblins
  • grins and giggles
  • guys and gals
  • hearth and home
  • hem and haw
  • Jack and Jill
  • Jew and Gentile
  • juking and jiving
  • king and country
  • kit and caboodle[3]
  • kith and kin
  • last but not least
  • latitude and longitude
  • Lend-Lease
  • life and limb
  • live and learn
  • lock and load
  • love it or leave it
  • mix and match
  • meek and mild
  • part and parcel
  • peas in a pod
  • pen(cil) and paper
  • pig in a poke
  • pillar to post
  • pots and pans
  • publish or perish
  • rags to riches[1]
  • ranting and raving
  • read and write
  • ready to rumble
  • rest and relaxation
    (a.k.a. R 'n' R)
  • (without) rhyme or reason
  • right and wrong
  • rock and roll
  • rough and ready
  • rules and regulations[1]
  • safe and secure
  • safe and sound
  • search and seizure
  • shot and shell
  • signs and symptoms
  • spick and span
  • spit and shine
  • Stars and Stripes
  • sticks and stones
  • sugar and spice
  • this or that
  • tic-tac-toe
  • tit for tat
  • top and tail
  • trick or treat
  • trials and tribulations
  • tried and tested
  • tried and true
  • truck and trailer
  • wash and wear
  • watching and waiting
  • weep and wail
  • wet and wild
  • whooping and hollering
  • wild and wooly
  • wise and wonderful
  • witches and warlocks
  • wrack and ruin

With numbers

Pairs of two numbers joined by a conjunction generally appear in increasing numeric order, as in two or three rather than three or two.

With rhymes and similar-sounding words

  • break and take
  • box and cox
  • chalk and talk
  • charts and darts
  • chips and dip
  • double trouble
  • even Steven
  • fender bender
  • five and dime
  • flotsam and jetsam[3]
  • fun in the sun
  • no fuss, no muss
  • handy-dandy
  • harum-scarum
  • helter skelter
  • high and dry[1]
  • hire and fire[1]
  • hither and thither
  • hocus pocus
  • hoi polloi
  • hot to trot
  • huff and puff
  • hustle and bustle
  • lap and gap
  • lick 'em and stick 'em
  • mean, green,
    fighting machine
  • meet and greet
  • motor voter
  • my way or the highway
  • namby-pamby
  • name and shame
  • name it and claim it
  • near and dear
  • never, ever
  • nitty gritty
  • odds and sods
  • onwards and upwards
  • Orgy Porgy
  • out and about
  • pell-mell
  • pedal to the metal
  • pump and dump
  • rough and tough
  • shout and clout
  • saggy baggy
  • shake and bake
  • slowly but surely
  • smoke and joke
  • stash and dash
  • stop and drop
  • surf and turf
  • time and tide
  • town and gown[1]
  • use it or lose it
  • wake and bake
  • wear and tear
  • weed and feed
  • wham, bam, thank you, ma'am
  • willy nilly
  • wine and dine[1]
  • yea or nay
  • (the) yeas and (the) nays

With repetition

Some of these are examples of reduplication.

  • again and again
  • all in all
  • around and around
  • arm in arm
  • back to back
  • be all and end all
  • billions and billions
  • bit by bit
  • bling-bling
  • bumper to bumper
  • business to business
  • by and by[1]
  • let bygones be bygones
  • cheek to cheek
  • closer and closer
  • come, come
  • (from) coast to coast
  • day in, day out
  • day to day
  • day by day
  • for days and days
  • four-by-four (4x4)
  • elbow to elbow
  • end to end
  • dog eat dog
  • from ear to ear
  • end over end
  • an eye for an eye
  • eye to eye
  • face to face[1]
  • forever and ever
  • go, go, go
  • hand in hand
  • hand to hand
  • head to head
  • heart to heart
  • higher and higher
  • home sweet home
  • horror of horrors
  • kill or be killed
  • king of kings
  • less and less
  • lies, lies, and more lies
  • little by little
  • live and let live
  • lower and lower
  • louder and louder
  • man to man
  • measure for measure
  • more and more
  • mouth to mouth
  • neck and neck
  • never say never
  • nose to nose
  • on and on
  • out and out
  • over and over
  • round and round
  • run, run, run
  • shoulder to shoulder
  • side by side
  • side to side
  • so and so[1]
  • (and) so on and so forth
  • step by step
  • strength to strength
  • such and such
  • through and through
  • time after time
  • time and time (again)
  • (from) time to time
  • two by two
  • toe to toe
  • (on the) up and up[1]
  • wall to wall
  • for weeks and weeks
  • (from) wire to wire
  • woman to woman

Rhyming slang

Main article: Rhyming slang

  • Adam and Eve
  • apples and pears
  • bottle and glass
  • Brahms and Liszt
  • dog and bone
  • frog and toad
  • hand and blister
  • north and south
  • rabbit and pork
  • tit for tat
  • trouble and strife
  • two and eight
  • whistle and flute

People and fictional characters

Variants

Siamese twins occurring as a pair (that is, having two words occurring together) are also known as binomials. If the variant has three words occurring together, it is also known as a trinomial.

Trinomials

  • beans, bullets, and bandages
  • beg, steal, or borrow
  • blood, sweat and tears
  • Eagle, Globe, and Anchor
  • eat, drink, and be merry
  • bewitched, bothered and bewildered
  • bird, ball, and chain
  • calm, cool and collected
  • could've, would've, should've
  • ear, nose and throat
  • guns, germs, and steel
  • hand, foot, and mouth
  • healthy, wealthy, and wise
  • here, there and everywhere[1]
  • hook, line and sinker[1]
  • fat, dumb, and happy
  • fear, uncertainty and doubt
  • fraud, waste, and abuse
  • Friends, Romans, countrymen
  • Get it? Got it? Good.
  • gold, silver, and bronze
  • lather, rinse, repeat
  • lie, cheat, or steal
  • lights, camera, action
  • win, place, or show
  • hop, skip and jump
  • I came, I saw, I conquered
  • (no) ifs, ands, or buts
  • judge, jury and executioner
  • left, right and center[1]
  • life, liberty, and property
  • lock, stock and barrel
  • mad, bad and dangerous
  • me, myself, and I
  • nasty, brutish and short
  • Peter, Paul and Mary
  • planes, trains, and automobiles
  • ready, willing and able
  • reading, writing and 'rithmetic
  • red, white and blue
  • sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll
  • signed, sealed, and delivered
  • slip, trips, and falls
  • sugar and spice and everything nice
  • tall, dark and handsome
  • the good, the bad and the ugly
  • Tom, Dick and Harry[1]
  • neither rain, nor sleet, nor snow
  • shake, rattle and roll
  • short and sweet and to the point
  • small, medium, and large
  • stop, drop and roll
  • stop, look, and listen
  • soup, soap, and salvation
  • this, that, and the other
  • up, down, and sideways
  • way, shape, or form
  • whats, whys, and wherefores
  • win, lose, or draw

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 1.24 1.25 1.26 1.27 1.28 1.29 1.30 Gramley & Pätzold (2004). A Survey of Modern English (2 ed.). London: Routledge. p. 58. ISBN 0-415-30034-7. Retrieved 2012-10-04.   via Questia (subscription required)
  2. Spick-and-span, Gary Martin, Phrases.org.uk
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "8 Amusing Stories Behind Common Expressions | Reader's Digest". Rd.com. 2011-11-13. Retrieved 2011-12-18.

External links