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Rebus

A rebus is a puzzle that encodes words or phrases using visual cues—pictures, symbols, letters, or their arrangements—that represent sounds or meanings rather than the words themselves. Solving a rebus involves interpreting the cues to recover the intended phrase.

The term rebus derives from Latin res, meaning "thing," and began to describe picture-based wordplay in early

Rebuses vary in form. Pure pictorial rebuses rely on images alone; phonetic or letter-based rebuses use letters,

Today rebus puzzles appear in newspapers, magazines, educational materials, greeting cards, digital games, and advertising. They

Interpreting a rebus can depend on cultural context and language, which can lead to alternative solutions or

modern
Europe.
Rebus
devices
appear
in
medieval
manuscripts,
heraldry,
and
decorative
inscriptions,
and
the
form
gained
popularity
in
puzzle
books
and
magazines
from
the
18th
century
onward.
numbers,
or
symbols
to
suggest
sounds
or
syllables;
mixed
forms
combine
pictures
with
letters.
Common
examples
include
eye
+
heart
+
U
meaning
"I
love
you,"
sun
+
day
for
"Sunday,"
and
bee
+
leaf
for
"belief."
are
used
for
entertainment
as
well
as
to
teach
phonics
and
word
formation,
particularly
to
children
learning
to
read.
ambiguity.
Some
rebuses
rely
on
brand
names,
local
symbols,
or
homophones,
limiting
cross-cultural
portability.