Last-Second Word Swap

The character was going to say one thing. At the last second, someone else comes into the room, or they just think better of it, and the character is forced to say something else. Last-Second Word Swap can be Played for Laughs to Get Crap Past The Radar or Played for Drama when a character quickly finds him or herself in a stressful or unexpected position.

Compare Curse Cut Short, where another character or outside circumstance cuts off the word. Also compare Right Behind Me. Contrast with Unusual Euphemism. Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion is a subtrope; before adding an example here, make sure it doesn't belong there.

Sister Trope to Lame Rhyme Dodge.

Anime & Manga
"Jessie: To protect us from all that chafing and itching! James: It might finally stop all of Jessie's...complaining!"
 * It isn't obvious, but at one point, while still in the "fervently denying I'm in love with her" stage, Inu-Yasha gets very upset at "someone that made away with Kagome...'s shards."
 * One episode of Pokémon, "Hassle in the Castle", has Team Rocket doing this with their motto.

Comics -- Books
"Nurse: Your friends, Mr. and Mrs. Hollis are here to see you. Sally: What? But I don't know any...I don't know anyone I'd rather see!"
 * At the end of Watchmen, when :


 * Done by none other than Peter David on his run on Incredible Hulk. On a special issue, the moment where a frustrated Hulk shouts "Aw, sh-" is interrupted by another scene; and when we get back to him he ends his exclamation with "-oot!"

Fan Works
""I for one would never say f...oul language like that, Headmaster, I hope you know!""
 * This Harry Potter fanfic.

"Jacob: I want those lee...ders of the supernatural world gone."
 * Luminosity has one with a Fantastic Slur for vampires, "leeches". For context, there are some vampires who are on Jacob's side, whom he is addressing, and some who aren't.

"Misato: "She's as energetic as a firefly!" Toji: "Yeah, I bet there's something burning up her ass-uka! Uh-oh.""
 * Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series
 * In its second Christmas episode: "The Pharaoh awoke the very next day / Wearing an outfit that made him look -- erm -- handsome."
 * Also with the Paradox Brothers: "You may think us rather crass, But you can take your cards and stick them right up your...NOSE!" (Though it's doubly subverted in the next few lines, "You were supposed to say "ass", brother, I thought we rehearsed this!")
 * : I'm in love with.
 * Evangelion Abridged, during its eighth episode, when the characters are discussing Asuka, only to find she's waiting at the top of the escalator they're riding:

""Behold these ponies, without any class! A fillie like that likes it in the-" "Heeeeeyyyyy!" "...grass.""
 * Beating the Heat gives us this lovely gem from Zecora when she sees.

Films -- Animation
"Come on in. What the heck?/ Fall on down. Break your... face"
 * From Ratatouille: "Because I love youuuuur advice!"
 * In The Road to El Dorado Tulio exclaims "Holy...Ship!" as a boat appears and nearly runs over his raft. Of course, as a ship of the conquistadors, it literally WAS a Holy Ship...
 * Shrek
 * Shrek and Donkey enter Lord Farquaad's castle and are greeted by musical wooden puppets at the Information Center, who sing, "Please keep off of the grass / Shine your shoes / Wipe your...FACE." Made funnier, because as the puppets sing, they also mime/dance what they're singing. By the time they get to the last line, their butts are in the air and they're looking backwards, but they quickly turn around.
 * In the Halloween Special, Scared Shrekless, the puppets make a return singing a Dark Reprise of the previous song where the swap is more for Shout-Out to the original song.

"Phil: My answer is, Two Words-- (hit by lightning) Phil: ...okay."
 * "I like an honest fight and a saucy little maid / What he's basically saying is he likes to get...paid."
 * In the Disney movie Brother Bear, two squabbling moose brothers share a fond memory of drinking fresh dew. They realize that Aw, Look -- They Really Do Love Each Other but can't admit it: "I love...dew!" "I love dew too!"
 * In Disney's |Hercules, Phil's response to Herc's ambitions:

"Nani: You are so finished when I get in there! I'm gonna stuff you in the blender, push "puree", then bake you into a pie and feed it to the social worker! And when he says, "Mmmm, this is great, whats your secret?" I'm gonna say...(Bubbles hooks Nami's foot, and pulls her out of the dog door) ...love! And...nurturing."
 * In Lilo and Stitch, this is combo-ed with a Right Behind Me moment:

Films -- Live-Action
"Carmen: Oh Shi--ttake mushrooms."
 * Wayne's World 2. "We'll cross the Ts and dot the...(notices he's about to offend their manager, who has Mismatched Eyes)...lower case Js."
 * The first Spy Kids movie uses one of these that was arguably a Parental Bonus (the same joke was seen a decade earlier in The Golden Girls):

"Carmen: You are SO full of shi--ttake mushrooms."
 * Reused in the fourth one.
 * And in the second one:

"Narrator: And they were dangerously close to sticking a coconut up Lyle's...sleeping bag."
 * In the film version of George of the Jungle:

"Geoffrey: Please Will-- (others shoot him a look) Please will you help me, Sir Ulrich?"
 * In A Knight's Tale, Geoffrey Chaucer is begging Will Thatcher (who is masquerading as the knight Sir Ulrich) to help with his gambling debts in front of his creditors.

"Queen Clarisse: You look so...young. Mia: Uh, thank you. And you look so...clean."
 * The Princess Diaries:

"Malcolm Tucker: You are a real boring fuck! Sorry, I know that you disapprove of swearing, so I'll sort that out: you are a boring eff-star-star-cunt."
 * In the Loop contains a rare example of a word being swapped for one which is more offensive:

"Mother Otter: Ah fff-phooey."
 * The Hilarious Outtakes of Emmitt Otter's Jug Band Christmas had a great example, after the mother otter flubs a line:

"Buzz: Now, enough of this gooey sh-- ...show of emotion."
 * At the end of Home Alone 2:

"Little Rock: Have you heard about Pacific Playland? There are no zombies there. Columbus: The amusement park? Little Rock: Yep! Tallahassee: That place totally blows! (Little Rock and Wichita give Tallahassee angry looks) Tallahassee: ...my mind. Just fun for the whole family."
 * In Zombieland:

"King Malbert: What are you doing? Carl Cristall: Scratching my invisible...but onto my next question."
 * In My Cousin Vinny, Vinny's foul mouth has already gotten him in trouble a couple times when he's presented with a boatload of new disclosed evidence. "I need some more time to go over all this sh...stuff!"
 * From Igor:

"Marty: You're not gonna be picking a fight, Dad...Dad...Daddy-o!"
 * In The Man, Eugene Levy tries to get Samuel L. Jackson to stop cursing so much: "Oh, fffor crying out loud!"
 * An interesting example in A Christmas Story: a censored "re-enactment" using the word-swap. Young Ralphie, after a mishap, ends up saying "Oh...fuuddggee." But then, the narrating older Ralphie reveals, "Only I didn't say 'fudge'."
 * Back to The Future has a rare example where the whole word comes out and then has to be converted retroactively—which only Marty McFly could pull off:

"Bruce: Holy shhhh- ...cow."
 * In The Gamers: Dorkness Rising, one of the male gamers quickly tries to avoid insulting the one girl in the party when he makes a comparison between losing track of time while playing D&D to losing track of time when "looking for porn...-litical commentary." Another player immediately Lampshades it: "Nice dodge, Gary."
 * Bruce in Bruce Almighty pulls one of these when he realizes who it is he's talking to.

"Tommy: Well shhhhhhhheeee.....oot."
 * In St. Trinian's 2: The Legend of Fritton's Gold, Geoffrey infiltrates a organization dedicated to hating women for the titular (all-girls) school but during it, goes against orders and delivers a tirade against them, joining the bad guys..
 * In The Frisco Kid Tommy the cowboy starts to swear in front of Rabbi Avram and (of course) swaps it out at the last second.

"Delores: I've got two words for you Vince - Reverend Mother: Sister Mary Clarence! Delores: Bless you."
 * Done in Sister Act after the climax when Delores's ex, Vince, is about to be taken away.


 * From Monty Python and the Holy Grail, as the Lord of Swamp Castle holds his hands in front of his chest to suggest a woman's breasts: "She's rich, she's beautiful, she has huge...tracts of land!"
 * Monty Python's Life of Brian: One character has a rather severe stutter. To get around it, he swaps one word for another, despite it not being close to the original word.
 * In the Bud Spencer and Terence Hiill 1977 comdey film Crime Busters, the duo plans to rob a a supermarket and bust through the door with the words "This is a...!". When they realize they are standing in an office room of the local police department with everyone staring at them, they quickly finish the sentence with "... really nice office!" (as opposed to "... robbery!").

Literature
"The judgments that you tend to pass, On poets you wish to harass, Would give me to swear, Were I unaware, That you are naught but an asset to the Heavenly throne, wherefore I leave you alone."
 * In Steven Brust's To Reign in Hell, Ariel is requested to speak in other than rhyming couplet. In response, a limerick:

"Holmes: Arrest you! This really is most grati-- most interesting. On what charge do you expect to be arrested?"
 * Sherlock Holmes of all people gets one of these in The Adventure of the Norwood Builder.

"Holmes: [You] handled the Molesey Mystery with less than your usual -- that's to say, you handled it fairly well."
 * Though to be fair he was probably bored out of his skull before McFarlane (the guy he was talking to) showed up...
 * Another (even funnier) one comes in The Adventure of the Empty House, as he speaks to Lestrade.


 * A travel guide detailing various local traditions says that, "In France, many believe that raw oysters enhance your appetite for...Christmas." Probably a Parental Bonus as well.
 * In the Star Trek novel Cast No Shadow, the Klingon General Igdar challenges a subordinate, Kaj, regarding her "communications with the - the Federation", and it's clear that he was going to say "with the enemy", forgetting that the Klingons and Federation have been at peace for seven years.
 * In This Rough Magic, the well-endowed Svanhild Thordardottar is described as "the one with the big pair of--of--bodyguards". To be fair, her brothers are rather imposing, in a Viking sort of way.

Live-Action TV
"Rachel: We can't find Chandler...'s vest."
 * In Friends, when Chandler panics and disappears before his marriage to Monica, Rachel is about to break the news to her when Phoebe arrives and signals that they've found him.

"Al: She has the biggest, roundest...camera lenses."
 * In Quantum Leap, Al is talking about a very attractive photographer.

"Tobias Fünke: Oh, great. And now you're mocking me. You selfish cun-- (Daughter enters room) Tobias Fünke: --try-music-loving lady."
 * Arrested Development
 * This scene:

"Tobias: Oh, a pregnancy test. There's something we never had, huh, Lindsay? Oh, no, we had to create our little Frankenstein monster out of science and money and just a dash of...Maeby...how long have you been standing there? Maeby: I just walked in. Tobias: (chuckling) Seems like only yesterday you were bursting forth from your mother's fertile womb."
 * Another example involving Tobias and Maeby:

"Lindsay: We managed to raise $50,000! Tobias: Well most of that money was from the Bluth Company, I mean how... (Lindsay shoots him a look) Tobias: ...are you?"
 * Yet another example, again with Tobias:

"Wolowitz: We only did it because you were being a giant dictator. Koothrappali: I thought you said we were going to be nice to him! Wolowitz: That's why I added the "tator"."
 * From an episode of The Big Bang Theory:

"Xander: As if even that's enough to stop the unholy master!...bater."
 * The couple who run the village shop in Father Ted are always on the verge of throttling each other. When one of the priests enters, they often turn a stabbing motion into a warm embrace. (Not a word swap so much as a gesture swap, but the same idea.)
 * Babylon 5
 * In the episode where Ambassador Mollari objects to the figures of him sold in the station gift shop because they do not include "attributes" (the tentacle-like sex organs attached to the back of Centauri men), Ivanova says, "So you're saying you're being symbolically cast...in a bad light?"
 * She does it again in a later episode, when discussing a nightmare in which she shows up naked on the command deck: "This morning I dreamt I walked into C&C totally...unprepared for my work." But then the punchline is itself punchlined when Sheridan offhandedly remarks it could've been worse...and then describes the actual dream.
 * Not to mention Delenn in "Shadow Dancing", discussing what happens if a male Minbari continues to express interest in a female if she's not interested: "She can leave when he's asleep, file a complaint with the elders, even cut off his...access to her family." Word of God has it that this is a subversion, in that she was merely stumbling over her words and what she actually said is true; Sheridan's reaction to what he thought she was going to say is a Crowning Moment of Funny.
 * In a scene set in the future, holograms possessing the personalities and memories of the B5 crew were being manipulated by a propaganda minister in a totalitarian government. After gaining control of the system's defense computers, the Garibaldi hologram suggested to the minister, "My recommendation for you would be to stick your head between your legs and kiss your aspirations goodbye."
 * From the final episode of Seinfeld: "I love You--...United Airlines."
 * Most episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer where the "Scooby Gang" is discussing the Monster of the Week in a public area ("Angry.. puppies").
 * In the musical episode, Tara's song has the added-syllables variant: "You make me come...-plete!" Come-plete with back-arching and camera-dodging actions suited to one of those words.
 * Same episode, Xander substitutes clearly sexual terms with "tight embrace". Twice.
 * "We kissed, you and me. All Gone With the Wind, with the rising music and the rising...music."
 * Buffy also has a rare version where adding syllables makes it worse, in the Season 5 premiere, "Buffy vs. Dracula":

"Buffy: (to Giles) It was boring, old, and English. Just like you...ul. Yul Brenner. A British Yul Brenner."
 * There's a little bit of Fridge Brilliance there, when you consider Dracula had hairy palms in Bram Stoker's original novel, coinciding with a popular urban legend that this characteristic may develop from excessive masturbation.
 * In "Lies My Parents Told Me":

"Buffy: I gave Riley the day off. Joyce: I don't think he thinks of you as a chore, Buffy. Buffy: I know that. Look, I told him to make plans with his friends because I wanted to have you all to myself, okay? Besides, I can see him any time. And I'm sure he'll come over later looking for a little (remembers that she is talking to her mother)...Bible Study! Joyce: (not buying it for a second) Well, good. I mean, just as long as the two of you are spending some quality time with...The Lord. Buffy: Oh, we are. Absolutely."
 * A adorable scene from "Into the Woods"—Joyce is worried that Buffy is neglecting her boyfriend because of her illness:

"Andrew: He never really loved...hanging out with us."
 * Andrew talks to Jonathan about Warren in a particularly Ho Yay inducing example:

""I knew you'd end up welcoming me back with open...arms.""
 * Spike has Harmony on a bed and is running his hand up her leg.

"Cordelia: Excuse me? We didn't come here to talk about Willow. We came here to do things I can never tell my father about because he still thinks I'm a...good girl."
 * In "Phases" Cordelia is parking with Xander at the local Make-Out Point and implies that at least one of them is no longer a virgin.

"Michael: And he thought, hang on, I've paid my money, I'm going to have something; so he flips him over, and he fu-- (Lynn enters the room) Michael: --and fu-- and funnily enough, it lands on its wheels, and it starts first time and they just drive away. Alan: (confused) ...That's the strangest story I've ever heard."
 * From I'm Alan Partridge:

"Dorothy: Ah, I see some people have already signed your cast. Kevin: Uh, yeah, some of the guys from the team. Are you signing it? Dorothy: Correcting it. There is no K in victory. Oh yeah, and we'll just change this to "Ms. Zbornak eats shittake mushrooms"."
 * In The Golden Girls, when Dorothy visits one of her students in hospital, they have the following conversation:

"Pearl: Starring the late Raúl Juliá, a very wonderful actor. What was he doing in this piece of sh...surely very quality, quality programming."
 * Mystery Science Theater 3000
 * Overdrawn at the Memory Bank'':

"Hyde: True, but they're not bigger than Barbara's. Kelso: Yeah, they are. Eric: You're dreaming. It's like comparing (Red walks in) Exodus and Deuteronomy, both of which have taught us very valuable lessons! Oh, hi Dad!"
 * Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode Fire Maidens of Outer Space: Joel and the 'Bots are demonstrating that any sentence can be turned into sexual innuendo with the right vocal tone ("Does this TV have a ree-MOTE? Ooh!"). Crow, at the behest of his evil doppelganger Timmy (long story), is citing examples that are rather too on the nose, culminating in "She's built like a brick sh--" "CROW!" "sh-showboat."
 * A commercial for the show Greek included a scene where one character was telling another that his female friend wanted to be fu...(nuns walk past) ...fun buddies with him.
 * That '70s Show played this trope straight twice, and then subverted it.
 * While the gang is discussing Playboy girls:

"Hyde: Because Barbara's are bigger than... (Kitty comes in) The Walls of Jericho, which as we all know came tumbling down, right?!"
 * And again:

"Hyde: Sounds like your dad is losing it. Kelso: Jeez. He's like this now, he's gonna be a total headcase if they shut down the plant. He's just gonna be this pathetic guy (Red enters) WITH BREASTS THE SIZE OF WATERMELONS!"
 * And finally:

"Eric: I stole my dad's tap! (sees Red) Back from those thieves!"
 * In another episode:

"Frost: Horn-rimmed Harry can stick it up his aahhh hello sir!"
 * In A Touch of Frost, Inspector Frost is being disrespectful to his superior as usual.

"Emmett: I'm sorry to interrupt this little meeting of the minds, but you're not the only ones who find this new regime insufferable. It's obvious that our rotund leader is channeling his sexual energies into the Buy More. In my opinion, our only hope-- Morgan: --is to channel them back into sex, yeah, it's brilliant, Emmett, but where do we find Big Mike a ridiculously out-of-his-league hottie? Lester: Yeah, someone who'll suck his...will to work out of him."
 * It should be noted that this particular joke has been used quite a few times in television and theater.
 * My Family: "Oh come on Dad! I'm no longer a virrrrrrrry naive person!" In a minor subversion, the Last-Second Word Swap doesn't work.
 * How I Met Your Mother
 * "...and she had a pierced...Brosnan. Pierce Brosnan is my favorite of all the Bonds."
 * Also, "I'm in love with...tacos!"
 * "I'm too old for this sh--" "STUFF. He said stuff."
 * From Chuck:

"Mary had a little lamb She also had a duck She put them on the window sill to see if they would... good night, ladies and gentlemen!!"
 * Battlestar Galactica Reimagined: Gaius Baltar is pretty much the god of this trope; because he's constantly talking to his hallucination of Six, when he's actually having a conversation with someone else he has to swap or insert words at the last minute to keep the real conversation going in a logical fashion.
 * The Benny Hill Show used this trope at least once an episode. Example:

"Lemon: You know, I always do have trouble telling ages when it comes to black... (Toofer walks into the room) Lemon: ...black shoes are my favorite color of shoes."
 * Thirty Rock
 * In one episode, Lemon and Pete are discussing how old Tracy's alleged son is.

""I'm getting too old for this shhhh sound the gas makes."
 * There was also an episode where a maintenance man had to deal with a gas leak during his last day before retirement.

"Lassiter: I have one thing to say to you, Spencer. Kiss my-- (a nun walks past) Lassiter: Sweet honey buns. Sean: I don't think you made that any better."
 * In the last episode of The Fast Show Ralph stops himself from drunkenly confessing his love to Ted just in time: "I don't care how old you are, even if you were a hundred I would love...I would love to get another drink."
 * Intentionally done by Veronica in Veronica Mars. When one of the characters in the programme that Veronica hates tells her that they were dealing with some trouble, Veronica says, "Trouble with a capital "T", that rhymes with "C", that stands for..." When her father objects she replies, "What? I was going to say "cute."
 * In Grace Under Fire, a guy at the plant realizes Grace, the supervisor, has just entered the room, and alters his story about the topless pancake house: "the waitresses all had these really big jugs...of syrup, that they poured over your pancakes..."
 * From Psych:

"Jamie: That was definitely one of those "What the (pause) heck am I doing?" moments."
 * A mild example from MythBusters:

"Will Betty be the one that he loves truly, Or will it be the one that we'll call...Lulie?"
 * Phoebe from Friends, in her song that totally isn't about Ross's love triangle with Rachel and Julie:

"C.C. Babcock: I'd love to meet the man who's taking you away from Max...a...million...shell...oil. Niles: Oh, nice save!"
 * The Nanny
 * Subversion:

"C.C. Babcock: He is throwing money at us, and she didn't even have to put out! (pause) Hors d'oeuvres! The cat!"
 * On another occasion, when Fran substitutes for C.C. to schmooze an investor:

"Shirley: What's going on here? Troy: We're trying to get Jeff ready for the fi-iiiiiii....iiiighhhh...t. Troy: (whispers) I couldn't think of another word. Jeff: Idiot. He meant we were figh- ...ting. It is hard to think of another word."
 * There was an episode where Maxwell tries to keep Maggie from spending a whole vacation making out with boys, and wants to send her to a convent in Switzerland. Fran suggests sending Maggie on a kibbutz instead, because she remembers having a good time on hers, but then tries to take back her suggestion when she realizes the only reason she enjoyed her kibbutz was because that was where she lost her..."hat".
 * Subverted in the Community episode "Comparative Religion", when Shirley confronts Jeff over his plan to fight a bully:

"Olive: Tell Ned I love...his pies."
 * Used by Olive on Pushing Daisies:

"Abby: Oh, I ran a whole slew of sh...stuff on that."
 * A Taxi episode had Louie addressing Latka as "you dumb fff...oreigner".
 * Frequently used by Del and others on Only Fools and Horses "Fff..for Gawd's sake, Rodney!"
 * From Better Off Ted: "I love you...tah! I love Utah"
 * In an episode of Wonderfalls, Aaron mentions the human instincts to "fight, flee or ...fun...have."
 * The JAG episode "Meltdown" was the second half of a two-parter that introduced the NCIS characters. In one scene, a nervous Abby is testifying on the witness stand and is asked about a piece of evidence":

"Geraldine: Oh, fuc...rying out loud!"
 * In The Vicar of Dibley, Geraldine has just been blindsided by someone who came into the room without knocking.

"Castle: She'd never go for it. She's a real bi... (Beckett comes in) Castle: For the record, I was gonna say "big rule follower.""
 * In Frasier, in the studio, Roz is talking about how hot a new colleague is and how she'd like to "give him a --" Frasier's chair spins around and she suddenly spots his young son sitting in it. "-- a great big Seattle hug!" She follows by giving him the hug in question. Frasier's son calls her on it with a dry, "Nice catch, Roz" in response.
 * Nathan Fillion get one in Castle, when he talks to a witness about Beckett.

"Carlton: You mean you're a virgin too? Will: Keep your voice down man, I AIN'T NO VIRGIN! (woman in front of him gets up and leaves) Hey, look man, when it comes to me and the honeys I just say de... (priest walks up to him) no way! Ooh, ugh yucky!"
 * In The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Will is comforting Carlton after his girlfriend leaves him at a wedding chapel and Carlton admits he is a virgin. Will says that it's okay and...

"Mom: Look at her swarming around, like she did nothing wrong! Katie: (coming to grips with things) ...she hasn't. Mom: I want the best for Emily, and she isn't! Katie: How do you know? Mom: Mums knows these things, you realize that some day. Katie: Are you really going to leave dad? Mom: I never thought that we would split up. But then I never thought that I would be evicted from our home, that my daughter would be a dy...so rebellious. People always let you down, princess. They fuck things up!"
 * Skins: Emily's and Katie's mother has problem dealing with life's curve-balls. Her daughter's girlfriend is trying to play the perfect host:

""And to use the vulgarities of the gutter, you are a worthless...Coulter.""
 * In the Saturday Night Live sketch "Lazy Sunday", Adam Samberg and Chris Parnell express their love for the Chronic—What? --cles of Narnia.
 * Countdown with Keith Olbermann:

"Al: (to Jill) That is a terrib...ly nice picture of you."
 * From Home Improvement:

"Jonathan: Oh, you must be jo...sef."
 * In an episode of NCIS, Ziva reads a report from her computer about a protester who smeared the side of a building with horse- *Beat* ...manure.
 * In an episode of Jonathan Creek, when Jonathan discovers that his boss's new bodyguard is a little person:

"I love a good rack...of lamb to taste."
 * Happens quite a bit in Young Blades:
 * At the end of the extended version of "Da Vinci's Notebook," Ramon finishes his poem about how everyone gets a girl except him with:

"Maybe I was distracted by the beautiful Emanuelle If D'Artagnan tries, he can go to -- *stabs* well..."
 * Again in the extended version of "Coat of Arms":

"D'Artagnan: There's nothing like lowering yourself into a soothing, warm body...of...water."
 * In "Rub-a-Dub Sub":

"Jacqueline: To see women act like that -- it makes me ashamed to be a... Siroc: To be a what? Jacqueline: To be a man who has to see women act like that, that's what. Siroc & Ramon: *confused looks*"
 * In "The Invincible Sword," Jacqueline tells Louis that she will "sleep across [his]...doorway every night," although this is probably an unintentional case.
 * In a deleted scene from "Four Musketeers and a Baby," when women are swooning over the Highwayman:

Music
"Well, I went for a drive in my pickup truck. I picked up my girl, 'cause I wanted to... Show her my gloves, 'cause she had on her mitts, And I blushed brightly when she showed me her... Perfume that she buys whenever Avon calls, So I took off my pants, and I showed her my... Polka-dot undies!"
 * Many, many playground songs, such as "Miss Susie Had a Steamboat".
 * "Polka Dot Undies" by Bowser & Blue is a novelty song built entirely around this trope.

"I have a sad story to tell you It may hurt your feelings a bit Last night as I walked into my bathroom I stepped in a big pile of ''Shaving cream, be nice and clean Shave every day and you'll always look keen!"
 * And long before that, "Shaving Cream" by Benny Bell repeatedly sets up each verse for a Last-Second Word Swap with the same substitution:

"''How could I ever fergit That you're a piece of... poop?"
 * Following this trend, Hayseed Dixie's "Poop In A Jar" cleverly swaps in a word that, while not as offensive, means exactly the same thing as the word it's replacing:

"Oh, I'm Melvin Rose of Texas, and my friends all call me "Tex". When I lived in old New Mexico, they used to call me "Mex". When I lived in old Kentucky, they called me "Old Kentuck". I was born in old Shamokin, which is why they call me "Melvin Rose""
 * A popular French song, La Jeune Fille du Métro (The Young Maiden of the Subway) is completely based on this trope, each verse concluded with a pause, followed by a an innocent sentence replacing a much more obvious, shorter, and naughtier conclusion.
 * Similarly, a popular song in Spanish, Pican los mosquitos (Mosquitos bite) is based on this trope, each verse running into the start of the next one instead of the obvious curse.
 * "FTK" from Guitar Hero II is a heavily-Bowdlerized version of the Vagiants' song "Fuck the Kells", with most of the changes applying to one or two words at a time ("fuck" becomes "frack", "the whole fuckin' NFL" becomes "the whole entire NFL"). However, the line "You can take this bar, and shove it up your fuckin' ass!" becomes..."You can take this car, and fill it up with tons of gas!" It's pretty clear they just went for goofy rather than reasonable substitution on that one.
 * To add a bit of insult to injury, they went and added a lead guitar track to this version that wasn't in the original, and the song is kind of boring without it, so the only way you can buy the song with it in is to get the cheesy Bowdlerized version.
 * Often used by George Formby in his efforts to Get Crap Past the Radar (although radar hadn't been invented yet...) in the 1930s. Examples:
 * One of his songs, called "With Me Little Ukulele In Me Hand" (no more needs be said than the title), actually didn't manage to get past the radar.
 * Parodied by The Fast Show by having a Formbyesque character singing Formbyised versions of Prince songs.
 * Skins used this exact song during a scene where JJ plays with his ukulele.
 * Often used by Allan Sherman in his efforts to avoid saying the word "ass". Examples:
 * "Get Me To The Temple On Time" -- "...some new shoes to break the glass. Tell all my old friends they can kiss my BRIDE."
 * "Hello Mudduh, Hello Faddah (Live version)" -- "...They've got style here, they've got class here. And if you're not careful you could lose your CHIPS here."
 * He also uses a last-second swap to avoid saying "schmuck"—Yiddish for "penis", with connotations of "jerk" and "idiot"—in this segment of his parody medley, "Shticks and Stones":


 * Arguably, the last-second swap itself is the punchline. (Oh, and Shamokin is a city in Pennsylvania, in case you were wondering.)

"Tony the Tiger: Everyday I wake up, and I get to work late, My boss says "Hey, what's up?" I say I'm grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrowing tired of this shit."
 * Dinah Shore's (utterly non-suggestive) hit "Sweet Violets".
 * Bran Van 3000's song "More Shopping" borrows a couple of these, swapping between the two vocalists each time there's a dodgy line.
 * The Assumption Song.
 * Tim Minchin's Taboo
 * Jonathan Richman's "Monologue About Bermuda" tells the story of when he was an overly serious young musician who went to Bermuda with his band and had his outlook changed by a local band who convinced him that fun music is cool, too. He was blown away by a song of theirs that went "Bang, bang, Lulu/ Lulu ran away/ Lulu had to go bang, bang, that's why she ran away/ Lulu had a boyfriend/ Name was Tommy Tucker/ Took her out to his house to see if he could/ Bang, bang, Lulu/ Lulu ran away..."
 * Inverted with Bo Burnham's Rehab For Fictional Characters.

"Bo: Maybe it's 'cause of the way that I walk, makes them think I like...boys."
 * Bo Burnham's My Whole Family....

"''Take a look at the girl next door, she's a player and a down right bore,"
 * The Who's song "My Generation": Many listeners interpret the line "why don't you all fff-fade away?" as a Cluster F-Bomb swapped at the last second. Nobody knows for sure.
 * Word of God says it's supposed to represent angst amongst the youth.
 * In Mika's "Lollipop", I always have to wonder if he really wants to sing it, or if it's just what he had to sing it as:

"''Jesus loves her, she wants MORE, oh, bad girls get you down!"
 * Especially considering the next lines:

"Nelly is a nice girl, but Hannah is a (w)hor(e)-- --rrible prude Bob is a policeman, but Peter is a pimp''-- ly and rude young man"
 * From PDQ Bach's "The Art of the Ground Round":

"They'll wine you, dine you, undermine'' you Better not bring the wife"
 * Jethro Tull's "Quizz Kid":

"''Irrefutable, indisputable The fact is psssh it happens"
 * Sugarland's "It Happens"

"You bitch, you bitch, you bitch, You betcha life I'll be okay. Ya whore, ya whore, ya whore, Ya horoscope told you it was the right thing to do today. You slut, you slut, you slut, Use lots of self-control and don't turn around. ''You cow, you cow, you cow, You count on it, I won't be breaking down."
 * The Scared Weird Little Guys' "(Bawdy) Christmas Day" is an entire song full of this trope - which then entirely blows up at the end of the song.
 * The entire point of Mitch Benn's "Not Bitter"; a song about how the singer is totally okay that his girlfriend left him.

"There once was a sailor who looked through the glass Spied a fair mermaid with scales on her-- Island where seagulls flew over their nests. She combed the long hair that hung over her-- Shoulders. It caused her to tickle and itch. The sailors cried out, "It's a beautiful-- Mermaid a-sitting out there on the rocks!" The sailors rushed forward, all grabbing their-- Glasses and crowding four-deep to the rail..."
 * "The Clean Song" is made of this trope:

"Miss Lucy had some leeches, her leeches liked to suck And when they drank up all her blood she didn't give a Funny when the doctors had locked her in her cell Miss Lucy screamed all night that they should go to bloody ''Hello to the surgeon with scalpel old and blunt He'll tie you to the table and he'll mutilate your--"
 * It goes on like that for the entire song.
 * Emilie Autumn plays it for Nightmare Fuel in "Miss Lucy Had Some Leeches":

"''Rock and roll ain't got no soul. Just a dick and a wallet, and you can suck my...wallet."
 * The Grammar Club's "Suck My Wallet" has a great one for its chorus, though the name of the song sort of gives it away:

"You make me come-- You make me complete You make me completely miserable"
 * Lit's "Miserable" plays with this trope in its chorus/opening lyrics:

"Now I'm falling asleep / and she's calling a cab While he's having a smoke / and she's taking a drag Now they're going to bed / and my stomach is sick And it's all in my head / but she's touching his...chest now He takes off her dress now..."
 * In the song "In My Country" by the Lemon Sisters, the singer implores lonely sailors with great big cocktail-shakers to come and visit her country.
 * Mr Brightside by The Killers:

"I promise to tell the truth The whole truth and nothing but... Lies -- you believe them all Lies -- you swallow them whole Lies, lies, half truths misinformation and... Lies -- you believe them all Lies -- you swallow them whole Lies, lies, half truths misinformation and..."
 * And that's a double dose of this trope from Carcass' "Don't Believe a Word":

"Old Hickory said we could take 'em by surprise If we didn't fire our muskets 'til we looked 'em in the eye ''We held our fire 'til we seed their faces well Then we opened up our squirrel guns and really gave 'em...welllllll, we..."
 * Johnny Horton's "The Battle of New Orleans":

"Well, our counselor said we could take 'em by surprise If we didn't say a word 'til we looked 'em in the eyes We kept real still and we had our eyes a-glued We saw how they were dressed, they were swimmin' in the...welllllll now!"
 * Also played with in Homer and Jethro's parody, "The Battle of Kookamonga":

"Using brushes is not chic, Body contact is the thing you seek, ''You should paint using your hands and feet, I suspect you painted this one with your ass...ass...asking for the gallery"
 * "The Black Painting Song" by Matrin Pearson:

"A little bit of this is all I need Can't wait to get home and smoke some Throw it in ya grill, then called my seed (scene?) And when the street lights go off, we"
 * A certain (unofficial) school song: "Within our ancient, ivied halls / Smith women show they've got some poise."
 * In Anna Russell's grand-opera spoof "Anaemia's Death Scene," the dying Anaemia refers to her Unwanted Fiancé as a "miserable old...baritone."
 * A double subverted lyric with different words than you'd think - Hieroglyphics' Throw it in Ya Grill:

"I see a future where we're all in one big tent together talking On cell phones, to people in some other tent somewhere ''And I see a future where poverty and starvation have been eliminated From all news coverage"
 * Not where you thought they'd go with that, was it?
 * Roy Zimmerman lives for this trope. Combined with his frequent Subverted Rhymes, you can never be 100% sure how a line will end, but unless you know the lyrics ahead of time, you can almost guarantee that the line won't end how you think it will. One good example is One World, One Bank

"I see a future where there are no wars Just corporate-sponsored police actions with play-by-play on ESPN ''And I see a future where concern for privacy is a thing of the past Because privacy, my friends, is a thing of the past."

""I see angels and devils and God when you come... on get higher""
 * Tom Lehrer's (spoken) introduction to his song "Lobachevsky": For many years now, Mr. Danny Kaye, who has been my particular idol since childbirth, has been doing a routine about the great Russian director Stanislavsky and the secret of success in the acting profession. And I thought it would be interesting to st... to adapt this idea to the field of mathematics."
 * The song Deutschland by the German band Die Prinzen starts out as a tongue-in-cheek song praising the positive attributes of Germany and Germans. After the second chorus the singer starts sounding increasingly serious, nationalistic and subtly reminiscent of Those Wacky Nazis, culminating in the line "Wir können stolz auf Deutschland..." (We can [...] proud of Germany...). But instead of finishing it with "sein" (the German word for "be", which should go at the end of the sentence in this case) the band starts chanting the word "Schwein" (swine/pig), a common German insult and the band's favourite word, to show that the preceding passage was just satire.
 * Matt Nathanson's "Come on Get Higher"

""But it always seems to bite me in the...Ask me for my number""
 * "Take a Hint" by Victoria Justice and Elizabeth Gillies:

"Oh you know that Santa's watching you And he keeps a great big list ''But when I tell him the things you do He really will be... mad."
 * Heywood Banks' Anti-Christmas Song "You Ain't Getting Diddly-Squat" has this:

Newspaper Comics

 * A Beetle Bailey strip had Beetle writing on the wall "SGT. SNORKEL IS A BIG STUPI--". He then notices said sergeant, and finishes writing "SGT. SNORKEL IS A BIG STUPENDOUS PERSON". Beetle walks away relieved, with Sgt. Snorkel looking happy.
 * This strip in Garfield, sort of.
 * This Dilbert strip.

Radio
"''A woman once said: "What the heck" to me, "You look like a physical wreck to me, You're a leery old gent -- However, come to my tent, Though it doesn't look very erect to me.''"
 * I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue`s Limericks game is halfway between this and Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion: each player has to make up one line of a limerick that goes with the previous ones according to the AABBA rhyming scheme, so the earlier players often deliberately set up words that obviously rhyme with something obscene. Then the later players scramble to come up with something else (which may also be dirty), subverting the audience's expectations and leading to a laugh. Example (where the subverted rhyme is "hysterectomy"):

Theater
"Robbie: Because we are living in a material world, and I am a material...guy..."
 * The Wedding Singer
 * Used in The Musical, when Robbie starts singing Madonna's "Material Girl."

"Rosie: Because Linda is a filthy rotten...skanky whore!"
 * Also seems like it's going to be used in "Rosie's Letter," but then subverted. In fact, a word is added.

"Othello loved Desi like Adonis loved Venus / And Desdemona loved Othello cuz he had a big...sword..."
 * From the Reduced Shakespeare Company's (musical) version of Othello:

"Hamlet: For thou must know, oh Damon dear, this realm dismantled was Of Jove himself and now regns here a very, very--pajock. Horatio: You might have rhymed. Presumably the avoided word was "ass"."
 * And Shakespeare himself in Hamlet, Act 3 Scene 2

"Eliza: You, dear friend, who talk so well / You can go to...Hartford, Heresford and Hampshire!"
 * "Without You", from My Fair Lady:

"Mrs. Lovett: Ain't that just revolting All greasy and gritty It looks like it's molting And tastes like...well, pity..."
 * In "The Worst Pies in London" from Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street:

Video Games
"Graham: Why you... Hagatha: Witch? Valanice: I'm sure it would have rhymed."
 * Buy an overpriced Amulet of Annihilation from a shady vendor in Secret of Evermore, and he'll wind up surprised that you spent so much money on a "worthless piece of cra...ss jewelry."
 * In the Fan Remake of King's Quest II, the subject of the insult does this for the would-be insulter, and it also gets a Lampshading:

"Sig: It's gonna be a big pile. Daxter: (holding Sig's Peacemaker) Yeah, a big pile of sh--ould I cock this?"
 * Jak 3

"Nate: How the hell am I supposed to shoot down a hel-lo."
 * Uncharted 2: Among Thieves, while Drake is being chased on a train by an attack helicopter, he comes across a large vehicle that ends up being an anti-air attack tank.

"Chip: Thanks for asking, Mister Monster Gu-- I mean, Sonic The Hedgehog!"
 * Sonic Unleashed

"Aegwynn: I really wish you mages would get your head out from inside your own...books."
 * This one isn't as bad though, is it?
 * Psychonauts: "And I'll kick your ASS...tral projection out of here, too."
 * An early version of X-Plane had this description of the B-52: "Known by pilots as the BUFF: Big Ugly Flying Fu- um...Fellow."
 * Banjo-Kazooie Nuts & Bolts has this lovely challenge starring Piddles the Cat: Cheating Witch.
 * In World of Warcraft you can fish coins out of the Dalaran Fountain. A lot of well-known characters from the Warcraft universe have done a wish you can read when you fish up their coin. Aegwynn, who doesn't like the mages of Dalaran, wished the following:


 * Ace Attorney Investigations: "B-b-b-b-however, sir!"
 * Kingdom of Loathing's "pirate pamphlet", quoth the in-game description, "contains helpful tips on all manner of pirate activities, such as swabbing, quaffing, pillaging, and rapi...er, rapier-sharpening."
 * And on using its peppermint pip packet: "You pop open the packet of peppermint pips and put them in the pocks you poked with your p... your finger."
 * In Mass Effect 3, Jack's not allowed to swear in front of her students. At one point she tells Joker "Screw you, f...flight lieutenant!"

Web Animation

 * Teen Girl Squad episode #7: "I saw Tompkins in his under--where're you going?"

Web Comics
"Haley: I think I'm in love with y-- Durkon: Cure Critical Wounds! (Beat Panel) Haley: --ukuleles."
 * Order of the Stick
 * In this strip, where Haley's deathbed confession is derailed by a handy heal spell from the party's cleric.

"Tarquin: You remind me a bit of my fifth wife. Hayley: Why? Was she a redhead too? Tarquin: No, but she had the most magnificent set of perky round... Hayley: Eyes. Let's both pretend you were about to say "eyes". Tarquin: Fair enough."
 * Also rather harshly enforced by Haley in a much later strip.

"Julia: You KNOW what I mean, you can read my...um, e-mail."
 * Left-Handed Toons: Prepare to...
 * Misho of Keychain of Creation manages to dodge an awful pun at the last moment: "Take that...rooster out of your mouth."
 * Think Before You Think: In this comic, Julia remembers mid-sentence that her mom is in the room and doesn't know that Brian can read minds.


 * Meat Shield: Dhur tries one here, but he's not very good at it.
 * Bob and George: "That's the hand I use to m - er, write with."
 * Walking on Broken Glass: "And three is..."
 * Dangerously Chloe had a moment when Teddy tells his sister that with her... (Chloe blushes profusely) (Teddy realizes where the phrase turned, stops and also blushes) ...her kissing lessons! Naturally, the chapter's opening page shows the two in the position and state of dress that does not look like "kissing lessons" at all.

Web Original
"Look at his smallness Compared to my tallness,"
 * Commentary! The Musical
 * In the song "Better Than Neil", Nathan Fillion sings about all the ways in which he's better than Neil Patrick Harris. There's one segment of the song where every line ends in "ness," with lines such as:

"My wonderful me-ness, My hammer, the pe--ople can tell that I'm awfully swell."
 * This goes on for a few counts of 8. He then sings:

"''Joker are you busy? Let's call a truce. I need you to help explain the plot to-- Batman."
 * Key of Awesome episode #8:

"Misty: /Hey, Ash, baby are you ready to jet/ /I'm the water themed trainer and you make me so-/ Ash: /Let's go pick up our old pal Brock/"
 * On an episode of Yes, Dear, Kim goes "Oh, shhhhhh...sugar." because there are kids around. Either Dominic or Logan looks up at her and says "I know what you wanted to say."
 * In this Pokemon Musical, for some reason one of these rhymes was last second swapped:

"Misty: /Oh he's the poke-trainer with the really big-/ Brock: /Cock!/"
 * But the very next one wasn't:


 * A non-profane example from the Zero Punctuation review of Portal 2: "the icing on the...French Fancy!"
 * A less worksafe, one, however, from his review of LittleBigPlanet: "There's a very in-depth level designer built in, with a host of tutorials, you'll be tempted to go through just to have Stephen Fry's voice tonguing your coc...hlea for hours on end."

Western Animation
"Rhinox: What are you saying? Rattrap: I'm sayin' that our little spider chum-- (Silverbolt -- Blackarachnia's love interest -- walks in) Rattrap: --is...a credit to her web-spinnin' species, and I don't know what we ever did without her."
 * In Transformers: Beast Wars episode "Cutting Edge": Rattrap is complaining about Blackarachnia to Rhinox.

"Mixmaster: What the fffront end loader was that!?"
 * In Beast Machines, Rattrap exclaims, "Botanica! Am I glad to see you...'ve brought us this new power supply."
 * Transformers Animated
 * Mixmaster says the following after Sari's failed attempt to attack the Constructicons:

"Starscream: Megatron...?! Did you just say Megatron?! Did he just say MEGATRON?! THERE IS NO MEGATRON! MEGATRON IS OFFLINE! TERMINATED! I DID IT MYSEL-- saw it myself."
 * There's also this (the last part being a quote from Sergeant Schultz of Hogan's Heroes):

"Sentinel Prime: As acting Magnus, I must be ready to strike should Omega...should Megatron make a move against us."
 * Then Sentinel Prime does it when trying to disguise his intent to blow up Omega Supreme.

"Homer: Mister Burns' reign of terror is over, and now begins my reign of terr-- (workers gasp) --iffic management. (relieved sighs) Lenny: Whoo, I thought he was gonna say "terror"! Carl: Eh, I didn't think he was going that way."
 * The Simpsons
 * Used when Homer takes control of the plant:

"Smithers: Mr. Burns, I love you...in those colours, sir!"
 * An earlier Simpsons episode has Smithers almost confessing his crush when the town is convinced by a self-help guru to act uninhibitedly:

"Marge: Am I going, too? Burns: Of course! We wouldn't think of going without the bait...uh, that is, the bait-thing beauty. The bathing beauty! ...Heh, heh, I covered that up pretty well."
 * In the "King Homer" segment of the third "Treehouse of Horror" episode, Mr. Burns is discussing going ashore to Ape Island when Marge shows up:

"Homer: Boy! When I get home, I'm going to wrap my hands around your neck-- (the doctors suddenly gasp and look at him) Homer: --and smother you with kisses. Bart: Dad, whatever they got you on, cut the dose!"
 * "The Wife Aquatic" involves Homer and others on a boat during a storm. As a giant tsunami is about to wash them away they yell: "SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"
 * Lisa and a friend also do a variation on "Miss Suzie Had a Steamboat" in the opening of "Little Boy and Fat Man". Homer eavesdrops on them and faints after a few lines.
 * In "Brother from Another Series" Sideshow Bob's brother Cecil screams Shhhhhhh...oot after he accidentally flings millions of dollars into the base of a dam.
 * In "Stark Raving Dad", Homer calls home from a mental institution.

"Homer: He appeared before me in a dream, and I knew that was special because I usually dream about naked...Marge."
 * When he tells Reverend Lovejoy that God spoke to him in a dream in "Homer the Heretic":

"Porky: Oh son of a bi-bi...son of a bi-bi, son of a bi-bi, son of a bi-bi...gun. Heh heh! I bet you thought I was going to say "son of a bitch", didn't you?"
 * In one episode of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Prince Adam, Teela, and Man-At-Arms are onboard a small spaceship heading to one of Eternia's moons. An asteroid is heading their way, and Adam comes to realize that there's no way to avoid turning into He-Man in front of Teela (who is not a Secret Keeper) and starts the first few words of By the Power of Greyskull...only for Man-At-Arms to eliminate the threat mechanically. Teela then asks Adam what he was about to say...prompting him to make up the transparent lie that he was about to say "By the way, Teela, remind me to show you my new vest". Teela, of course, concludes that Adam is an even bigger idiot than she thought...but still doesn't figure out there's more going on.
 * Filburt and Rocko in the Rocko's Modern Life episode "Kiss Me, I'm Foreign", are in the middle of an argument, when they're interrupted by a knock at the door. They find it's the immigration agent who's been threatening to have Rocko deported throughout the episode, and their response comes out as "What the hellooooo!"
 * Looney Tunes
 * On the short The Bashful Buzzard, Beaky calls a worm an "infinitesimal piece of sh-sh...shoe leather!"
 * Hilariously subverted in a gag reel: Porky Pig hits his finger with a hammer and says the following:

"Brian: ♪ I love the work of Allen Funt ♪ Stewie: ♪ Or a nicely shaven leg ♪"
 * In Booby Hatched, a Looney Tunes cartoon involving a semi-hatched baby duckling whose legs are sticking out of the egg, the duckling tries to find his mother, or a viable option: "I gotta find someone who will sit on me. Someone with a nice, warm...disposition!"
 * Family Guy
 * Neatly done in the song "When We Swing":

"Brian: ♪ You get a kick out of carnage and guts ♪ Stewie: ♪ And you get a kick out of stroking your...♪ Brian: (interupting him) Whoa!, Whoa you can't say that on TV! Stewie: What? Ego?"
 * Also in the song "We're Too Different to Ever Be Pals":

"''Miiis-suuus Landers was a health nut. She cooked food in a wok. Mr. Harris was her boyfriend, and he had a great big-- Cock-a-doodle-doodle, the rooster just won't quit And I don't want my breakfast, because it tastes like-- Shih tzus make good house pets. They're cuddly and sweet. Monkeys aren't good to have, because they like to beat their-- Meeting in the office or meeting in the hall, The boss, he wants to see you so you can suck his Balzac was a writer, he lived with Allen Funt Mrs. Roberts didn't like him, but that's 'cause she's a-- Contaminated water can really make you sick. Your bladder gets infected, and blood comes out your-- Dictate what I'm saying, 'cause it will bring you luck And if you all don't like it, I don't give a flying fuck!"
 * Done in an episode of South Park Wendy sings to the tune of "Miss Susie Had a Steamboat".

"Dot: Ode to a veggie. "Beans, beans, the musical fruit. The more that you eat, the more that you get in trouble if you finish this poem in front of your parents." Thank you."
 * Tried and failed in The Venture Bros, when the boys ask why they don't remember a villain who claims to be their mommy, Brock says "Look, you don't remember because you're clo-- (clones)". Both Brock and Doc stutter, trying to find a suitable replacement word, but fail.
 * Animaniacs.
 * "And now it's time for Dot's Poetry Corner":

"Dot: ♪ I never am vain ♪ Yakko and Wakko: ♪ She's becoming a pain in the...♪ Dot: ♪ But...I'm also real nice. ♪"
 * Also in Dot's song I'm Cute:

"Trixie: And Jake he keeps it on the level/ Taaking down The Jersey Devil-- Spud: Bear!"
 * American Dragon: Jake Long While rapping in front of Jakes' Locked Out of the Loop father.

"Isabella: That's not the Phineas Flynn I fell in...to this situation with."
 * In the Phineas and Ferb special "Summer Belongs to You!", the ever-hopeful Phineas momentarily gives up, and Isabella tries to snap him out of it:

"Scratch: She's beauuuutiful! Grounder: Yeah! She's got really big-- Scratch: Hair!"
 * Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog
 * After Robotnik invents his own robot wife:

"Scratch: Nice work . Grounder: Yeah, very nice; that little brat is a real pain in the-- Scratch: Hey! Grounder: --transmission!"
 * Also from the episode "Lovesick Sonic"

"The Web invaded Mainframe, sprite and virus battled side by side Attempting to reclaim the city from the rift which opened wide But Megabyte betrayed Bob and he threw him deep inside the pit The pit was closed and Bob was hosed and all that he could say was "NO!!!""
 * From the ReBoot episode "End Prog", the musical at the end gives us this gem:

"Drakken: Shego, as long as you're going to live under my roof, you'll follow my rules. And rule number one: no secrets. Whatever is going on... (Shego lights up her plasma) Drakken: ...is obviously a private matter."
 * In the Kim Possible episode "Go Team Go", Kim and two of Shego's Team Go brothers show up at Drakken's lair. Drakken tries to demand an explanation:


 * In "Coming!! Snafu", the first Private Snafu short (which makes this trope Older Than Television at the least), "Snafu" is defined as "Situation Normal: All ... Fouled Up"

Real Life

 * The Tex-Mex dish chimichanga, a deep-fried burrito garnished with vegetables and sauce, is said to have earned its name in 1922 when a Tucson, AZ restaurateur accidentally knocked a prepared burrito into the deep-fryer. She began to utter a Spanish curse word but, upon realizing children were present, modified her oath into "chimichanga".
 * I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream. /Banana split, we think your team plays like/ shift to left, shift to the right/ Come on "team name" fight fight fight!
 * A common neuroscience mnemonic, as follows: The functions of the amygdala are the four F's -- feeding, fighting, fleeing, and mating.
 * Or "fornicating", if you prefer Alliteration.
 * Also exists in the form "feeding, fighting, fleeing and fff...inding a mate."
 * This phrase was hilariously said by Jane Goodall.
 * Common in Phở restaurants such as What the Phở? and Phở King ("Phở" is pronounced as "fuh?", with the question mark.) The latter's slogan was "so Phở King great."
 * Also in certain lounge furniture stores that glory in the name Sofa King, and advertised their prices with the slogan "it's not just cheap, it's..."
 * Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau claimed to have said "fuddle-duddle" and not the phrase attributed to him by opposition MPs.
 * A cheer said at RPI hockey games: "We eat Wheaties, We keep fit! / Not like the other team, they eat shhhhhhhhreaded wheat!"
 * Rick Santorum may or may not have attempted this during one speech about cutting welfare because it shouldn't be there just "to make blah people's lives better." He claimed that he started to say "a word" and then mumbled. His opponents said he said "black" and attempted a Last-Second Word Swap but couldn't think of another word. And that's all we'll say about that.
 * A danish amusement park named Bon-Bon Land (which also had some controversial candy reasembling a turd, boobs, and so on, which until it got removed of the market, was an miracle that it pulled a Getting Crap Past the Radar moment) had it's slogan to be 'It's fucking hilariuos in Bon-Bon Land'. Later it got censored, and lately it's doesn't even have the F-word at all.
 * It should be noted that the Bon-Bon Land slogan above is roughly translated. A better version would be one without the direct F-word.