Double entendre
WordNet
noun
(1) An ambiguity with one interpretation that is indelicate
WiktionaryText
Etymology
+ . + .Noun
- A phrase that has two meanings, especially where one is innocent and literal, the other risqué, bawdy, or ironic; an innuendo.
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- 1812, A treatise on politeness, tr. from the French by a lady, page 172
- Avoid all equivocal expressions, usually denominated double entendre; they are certain proofs of a mean and indelicate mind.
- 1891, Paulist Fathers, Catholic World, page 785
- It is a momentous crusade without the cross ; and an insidious one, for the calumnies and double entendre against the church are well wrapped up and keenly distributed.
- 2000, James P. Lantolf, Sociocultural Theory and Second Language Learning, page 126
- It is not only the teacher's play with single words, phrases, and double entendre that are common in my classroom data.
- example of use in a joke,
- A women walks into a bar and asks the barman for a double entendre and he gives her one.
- 1812, A treatise on politeness, tr. from the French by a lady, page 172