Un Entendre

""We're here to buy some smoked ham! Ha! Ha! Ha!"

Fred turned everything into a sex joke, whether it made sense or not"

- Greeting card.

Double Entendres are a staple of comedy. Characters are so used to double meanings and innuendos flying all over the place, in fact, that sometimes they jump the gun and assume everything someone says is a Double Entendre (probably because Freud Was Right). It can take a few moments for them to realize that they don't actually know what other meaning "put some parsley on the chicken" is supposed to have. It just felt like it did.

Definitely Truth in Television. We've all done it or had it done to us at some point.

Compare Imagined Innuendo, Accidental Innuendo and Is That What They're Calling It Now?. Contrast Entendre Failure. Can be used for Double Entendres.

Anime and Manga

 * One of these kicks off Hanamaru Kindergarten. In the first episode, one of the main characters, a 4-year-old girl, is standing alone along on the side of the street. Another main character, a male kindergarten teacher, comes by on his bike and asks the little girl, "Excuse me, Ojou-chan. What are you doing here?" "Ojou-chan" essentially means "Miss" or "Little lady". Not an unusual way to address a young girl whom one does not know. Anzu, the girl, has a very active imagination, however, and she jumps to the conclusion that he's hitting on her. He turns out to be her teacher at kindergarten and the misunderstanding persists. Hilarity Ensues.

Comic Books
"Ruby: So, did you do him?
 * In X-Factor:

[...]

Layla: It didn't suit my fancy.

Ruby: Your "fancy"? Is that your pet name for your--?

Layla: Shut up."


 * The punchline of the Finnbarr Saunders strip in Viz would be that, after Finnbarr had spent a page desperately finding double entendres in everything, the other two characters would go off and have sex and Finnbarr would assume that they were doing something completely innocuous.

Film (Animated)

 * "It's Raining Sunshine" by Miranda Cosgrove, from Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs. If it's yellow and it's raining, it ain't sunshine.

Film (Live Action)
"Jimmy: Get out of my face!
 * Blades of Glory had this exchange:

Chaz: I'm gonna get inside your face!"

Literature

 * A Running Gag in A Song of Ice and Fire involves Shagga, son of Dolf, and his threats to cut people's "manhoods" off and feed them to goats.

Live Action Television
"Antonio: Oh, man. We're going to go upstairs and 'have sex' if you know what I mean."
 * In one Wings episode, Antonio (played by Tony Shalhoub) gleefully attempts to participate in stereotypical American male sex-humor with the guys just after the vixen seducing him beckons him to her room:

"Marshall: It's breakfast time in China.
 * In one How I Met Your Mother episode, Marshall and Lily had this exchange:

Lily: (sultry) Yeah it is.

Marshall: Not a euphemism... wait, what would that even mean?

Lily: I dunno. Hot buns, spicy pork, there's something there."

"Lily: A package just arrived.
 * In another episode, Marshall comes home from work, ready to have sex with Lily, and this dialogue ensues:

Marshall Yeah, it did!

Lily No, it's a big package from your dad.

Marshall Well, that's a little weird, but, yeah it is!"

"Servo: Hey, Joel. We've got... commercial sign. Heh heh heh...
 * Given equal parts lampshading and subversion in an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, when Joel instructs the 'bots that the art of entendre "isn't so much what you say, but how you say it".

Joel: And now a word from our sponsors, BOOM!

Crow: She was built like a brick sh...

Servo: Crow!

Crow: ...ow... boat. Showboat."

"Servo: Hey, guys, it's my favorite number! Woo-hoo!
 * Sometimes, the entendres are implied to be about to occur, but then avoided entirely, see Riding With Death, Where a spinning number dial gets to 69:

Mike: What, 70?

Servo: Yeah, I love 70!"

"Tobias: Well, yes, but I’m afraid I prematurely shot my wad on what was supposed to be a dry run, if you will, so now I’m afraid I have something of a mess on my hands.
 * This trope is the only reason The Todd exists as a character on Scrubs.
 * In-your-end-o!
 * In an episode of Arrested Development Tobias Fünke uses peculiar phrases when trying to say that he accidentally used a gift card whilst thinking it was just a preview of what he could get for it.

Michael: There's just... so many poorly chosen words in that sentence."

"Tobias: Oh, Tobias, you blowhard."
 * Tobias is made of this trope, and it's lampshaded more than once.

"Joey: [sexy voice] There's always room for Jell-O...
 * A classic example from Friends;

Rachel: How do you make that dirty?

Joey: Oh, it's easy. Yeah, I can do it with anything. Watch, uh... [sexy voice] "Grandma's chicken salad!""

"Jeff: Hey! Troy sneezes like a girl!
 * Whose Line Is It Anyway occasionally has this during the game "If You Know What I Mean", where everything is supposed to be a double entendre followed by "if you know what I mean", but occasionally one of the others will answer a particularly obscure line with "No, I don't know what that means". It's all Rule of Funny.
 * A notorious example is Colin's "fluff my Garfield". Which then went on to become the new innuendo of choice on the show.
 * An example from Community:

Troy: How about I pound you like a boy… that didn’t come out right."

Puppet Shows

 * In It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie, Pepe becomes Rachel Bitterman's assistant and assumes everything she says is a come on... eventually annoying her into to saying "You know... not everything is an innuendo!"
 * He then assumes that the word "innuendo" is itself an innuendo.

Web Original

 * An article in The Onion featured a person who tried to make an innuendo about a colleague looking after a co-worker's plants while she was on holiday. It was pointed out that 'I'll bet you'll "water her plants" while she's away' cannot be an innuendo as no sexual action whatsoever can take place between the two.

Web Comics
"Riff: How did your blind date go?
 * Happens in this Sluggy Freelance strip:

Torg: She got eaten by the alien.

Riff: All right! Way to go man! ... Oh, you meant that literally.

Torg: How the hell did you think I meant it?

Riff: Not sure, didn't really think about it too much, but it sounded dirty."


 * Or the one where the Nanite Queen says she'll eat Sam's brain, and Sam assumes it's slang for something naughty. She meant it literally.
 * Sam and Fuzzy has an example of this when Fuzzy rattles off a string of euphemisms after Sam's first date with Candice. Sam treats them straight, but the reader immediately discovers that Fuzzy is still under the influence of his home-made hallucinogens and all his euphemisms refer to things he is hallucinating.
 * Fun fact from The Whiteboard: "Brass nipples" are an actual component of a marker.

Western Animation
"Archer: "Way the Christ out in the Everglades burying some Dominican guy's rooster!"
 * Archer: Charles: "where have you been all night"

Charles: "Fun! Wha— Oh, you mean literally.""

Video Games

 * Oghren makes some of these when talking about weapons in Party Banter in Dragon Age Origins. Varric and Isabela also do this at one point in party banter in Dragon Age II.
 * For the record, Varric and Isabela were talking about knives. Well, technically daggers, but Varric can never remember the difference.
 * Uncharted 3 lampshades that Sully manages to make everything sound like some sort of innuendo.