Double-talk is a form of speech in which inappropriate, invented, or nonsense words are interpolated into normal speech to give the appearance of knowledge, and thus confuse or amuse the audience.[citation needed]
They do in fact go back to Ethelrebbers Unready, King Albert's burnt capers where, you know, the toast fell in and the dear lady did get a very cross knit and smote him across the eardrome excallybold. The great sword which riseyhuff and Merlin forevermore was the beginning of the Great Constitution of the Englishspeaking peeploders of these islone, oh yes.[9]
^Vaudeville, Old & New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America, vol. 1, Routledge, 2007, p. 621, ISBN978-0-415-93853-2, ... Al Kelly was synonymous with double-talk.
^Nilsen, Alleen Pace; Nilsen, Don Lee Fred (2000), Encyclopedia of twentieth century American humor, Bloomsbury Academic, p. 246, ISBN978-1-57356-218-8, Danny Kaye was a master at tongue-twisters, doubletalk, and dialects.
^Dobuzinskis, Alex (12 February 2014). "Comic legend Sid Caesar dies at 91". Reuters. Retrieved 2014-02-13. Some of Caesar's most popular bits were built around pompous or outlandish characters - such as Professor von Votsisnehm - in which he spoke in a thick accent or mimicked foreign languages in comic but convincing gibberish.
^Dick Vosburgh (17 January 2002), "Stanley Unwin", The Independent, archived from the original on February 1, 2011, In the 1930s, "double-talk artists" enjoyed a brief craze in American show business. Comedians such as Jackie Gleason and the long-forgotten Cliff Nazarro and Al Kelly spouted nonsense words like "kopasetic", "franistan", "strismic" and "kravistate". Their double-talk was usually used to hoodwink a stooge and was delivered briskly, loudly and aggressively. Britain's Stanley Unwin, however, delivered his own brand of double-talk in the most benign way
^Watts, Reggie (5 December 2013). "Reggie Watts at TEDx Berlin". TEDx Berlin. TEDx, Youtube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
^Bayer, Vanessa (6 May 2017). "Weekend Update: Dawn Lazarus". Weekend Update Weather Report. Saturday Night Live,Youtube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved 7 May 2017.