mishearings
Mishearings are perceptual errors in which the listener interprets spoken language or sung lyrics as different words than those intended. They arise when sounds are similar, speech is rapid, or audio is noisy, and they can occur in everyday conversation as well as in music, poetry, or radio broadcasts. In linguistics, mishearings of lyrics are often called mondegreens. A related concept, the eggcorn, refers to a mishearing that preserves the intended meaning but changes the form, such as "for all intensive purposes" instead of "for all intents and purposes."
Factors contributing to mishearings include phonological similarity, accents, coarticulation, lexical expectations, and context; top-down processing can
Famous music-related mishearings include "There's a bathroom on the right" from "Bad Moon Rising" and "Excuse
Mishearings offer insight into how perception and language processing interact. They have a place in folk humor,