What's the meaning of the sentence on Ariel's shirt?












17















In Ralph Breaks The Internet, in one scene, Ariel wears the t-shirt pictured below.



It says:




Gizmos &

Whooz-Its &

Whats-Its &

Snarfblats &

Dinglehoppers




Being not native speaker I'm having an hard time understanding its meaning.



May someone explain?



Tshirt










share|improve this question

























  • thisisinsider.com/…

    – BCdotWEB
    Jan 11 at 12:44






  • 6





    This shirt is also a reference to the "John & Paul & Ringo & George." Beatles T-shirt created by Experimental Jetset in 2001 - experimentaljetset.nl/archive/john-paul-ringo-george

    – Jacob Krall
    Jan 11 at 16:21
















17















In Ralph Breaks The Internet, in one scene, Ariel wears the t-shirt pictured below.



It says:




Gizmos &

Whooz-Its &

Whats-Its &

Snarfblats &

Dinglehoppers




Being not native speaker I'm having an hard time understanding its meaning.



May someone explain?



Tshirt










share|improve this question

























  • thisisinsider.com/…

    – BCdotWEB
    Jan 11 at 12:44






  • 6





    This shirt is also a reference to the "John & Paul & Ringo & George." Beatles T-shirt created by Experimental Jetset in 2001 - experimentaljetset.nl/archive/john-paul-ringo-george

    – Jacob Krall
    Jan 11 at 16:21














17












17








17








In Ralph Breaks The Internet, in one scene, Ariel wears the t-shirt pictured below.



It says:




Gizmos &

Whooz-Its &

Whats-Its &

Snarfblats &

Dinglehoppers




Being not native speaker I'm having an hard time understanding its meaning.



May someone explain?



Tshirt










share|improve this question
















In Ralph Breaks The Internet, in one scene, Ariel wears the t-shirt pictured below.



It says:




Gizmos &

Whooz-Its &

Whats-Its &

Snarfblats &

Dinglehoppers




Being not native speaker I'm having an hard time understanding its meaning.



May someone explain?



Tshirt







reference ralph-breaks-the-internet






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 11 at 12:43









BCdotWEB

27.6k482124




27.6k482124










asked Jan 11 at 11:52









Fez VrastaFez Vrasta

28927




28927













  • thisisinsider.com/…

    – BCdotWEB
    Jan 11 at 12:44






  • 6





    This shirt is also a reference to the "John & Paul & Ringo & George." Beatles T-shirt created by Experimental Jetset in 2001 - experimentaljetset.nl/archive/john-paul-ringo-george

    – Jacob Krall
    Jan 11 at 16:21



















  • thisisinsider.com/…

    – BCdotWEB
    Jan 11 at 12:44






  • 6





    This shirt is also a reference to the "John & Paul & Ringo & George." Beatles T-shirt created by Experimental Jetset in 2001 - experimentaljetset.nl/archive/john-paul-ringo-george

    – Jacob Krall
    Jan 11 at 16:21

















thisisinsider.com/…

– BCdotWEB
Jan 11 at 12:44





thisisinsider.com/…

– BCdotWEB
Jan 11 at 12:44




6




6





This shirt is also a reference to the "John & Paul & Ringo & George." Beatles T-shirt created by Experimental Jetset in 2001 - experimentaljetset.nl/archive/john-paul-ringo-george

– Jacob Krall
Jan 11 at 16:21





This shirt is also a reference to the "John & Paul & Ringo & George." Beatles T-shirt created by Experimental Jetset in 2001 - experimentaljetset.nl/archive/john-paul-ringo-george

– Jacob Krall
Jan 11 at 16:21










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















29














These are references to Ariel's treasures in The Little Mermaid.




Ariel has collected many things, each representing a special memory, adventure or a new discovery. She calls them her gadgets, gizmos, whosits, whatsits, and thingamabobs.



A Wikia



The Dinglehopper (a.k.a. the fork) is an artifact from the sunken ship which Ariel and Flounder explore early in The Little Mermaid. It is in fact a fairly ordinary object, but Ariel prizes the dinglehopper, as it is an artifact of the human world.




The Snarfblatt was a smoking pipe but Ariel was told....




[Scuttle shows Ariel and Flounder a tobacco pipe]



Scuttle: This, I haven't seen this in years. This is wonderful! A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.



Ariel and Flounder: Oh!



Scuttle: Now, the snarfblatt dates back to prehistorical times when humans used to sit around and stare at each other all day. Got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music. Allow me. [blows into it, only to have seaweed and water come out]



Wikiquote







share|improve this answer





















  • 36





    For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

    – 1006a
    Jan 11 at 17:44






  • 5





    It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

    – SpaceToast
    Jan 11 at 18:39






  • 2





    Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

    – jmbpiano
    Jan 11 at 19:25











  • Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

    – JPhi1618
    Jan 11 at 20:14






  • 2





    The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

    – swbarnes2
    Jan 11 at 22:52



















2














The shirt is a play on a design meme popular a few years ago, where related words or names are listed in Helvetica font with ampersands in between them, and a period after the last one. (The meme originated with a Beatles T-Shirt designed by a Dutch company.)



The words on Ariel's shirt all come from The Little Mermaid movie. Ariel likes to collect human artifacts. She calls them her treasures, but doesn't know what they are. She believes her seagull friend Scuttle knows all about humans (he doesn't, of course), and asks him the name and purpose of the things she finds. Since he doesn't actually know any more about humans than she does, the names he gives are nonsense words (dinglehopper, snarfblat) or words used as placeholders when you don't know what something is called (gizmo, whooz-it, whats-it, thingamabob).




I've got gadgets and gizmos a-plenty

I've got whoozits and whatzits galore

You want thingamabobs? I've got twenty!
"Part of Your World" lyrics




(From watching that song a few times, I've determined that a gizmo is a pocket watch, and thingamabobs are corkscrews. I can't figure out what object she's holding when she says "gadget" - it's something diamond-shaped at the end of a string. She sings "whoozits" and "whatsits" off-screen, but it's possible one or the other of them is used for eyeglasses, since that's what's shown when she sings those words.)



Scuttle also tells Ariel utter nonsense about what the items are used for. For example, when Ariel shows him a fork, he says,




It's a dinglehopper. Humans use these little babies to straighten their hair out. See? Just a little twirl here and a yank there and voila. You've got an aesthetically pleasing configuration of hair that humans go nuts over.
IMDB




Similarly, about a smoking pipe:




Scuttle: I haven't seen this in years, this is wonderful!
Ariel: What is it?
Scuttle: A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.
Ariel, Flounder: Oh.
Scuttle: You see the snarfblatt dates back to pre-hysterical times when humans would sit around and stare at each other all day.

[long pause]
Scuttle: got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music, allow me!
IMDB







share|improve this answer































    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    29














    These are references to Ariel's treasures in The Little Mermaid.




    Ariel has collected many things, each representing a special memory, adventure or a new discovery. She calls them her gadgets, gizmos, whosits, whatsits, and thingamabobs.



    A Wikia



    The Dinglehopper (a.k.a. the fork) is an artifact from the sunken ship which Ariel and Flounder explore early in The Little Mermaid. It is in fact a fairly ordinary object, but Ariel prizes the dinglehopper, as it is an artifact of the human world.




    The Snarfblatt was a smoking pipe but Ariel was told....




    [Scuttle shows Ariel and Flounder a tobacco pipe]



    Scuttle: This, I haven't seen this in years. This is wonderful! A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.



    Ariel and Flounder: Oh!



    Scuttle: Now, the snarfblatt dates back to prehistorical times when humans used to sit around and stare at each other all day. Got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music. Allow me. [blows into it, only to have seaweed and water come out]



    Wikiquote







    share|improve this answer





















    • 36





      For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

      – 1006a
      Jan 11 at 17:44






    • 5





      It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

      – SpaceToast
      Jan 11 at 18:39






    • 2





      Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

      – jmbpiano
      Jan 11 at 19:25











    • Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

      – JPhi1618
      Jan 11 at 20:14






    • 2





      The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

      – swbarnes2
      Jan 11 at 22:52
















    29














    These are references to Ariel's treasures in The Little Mermaid.




    Ariel has collected many things, each representing a special memory, adventure or a new discovery. She calls them her gadgets, gizmos, whosits, whatsits, and thingamabobs.



    A Wikia



    The Dinglehopper (a.k.a. the fork) is an artifact from the sunken ship which Ariel and Flounder explore early in The Little Mermaid. It is in fact a fairly ordinary object, but Ariel prizes the dinglehopper, as it is an artifact of the human world.




    The Snarfblatt was a smoking pipe but Ariel was told....




    [Scuttle shows Ariel and Flounder a tobacco pipe]



    Scuttle: This, I haven't seen this in years. This is wonderful! A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.



    Ariel and Flounder: Oh!



    Scuttle: Now, the snarfblatt dates back to prehistorical times when humans used to sit around and stare at each other all day. Got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music. Allow me. [blows into it, only to have seaweed and water come out]



    Wikiquote







    share|improve this answer





















    • 36





      For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

      – 1006a
      Jan 11 at 17:44






    • 5





      It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

      – SpaceToast
      Jan 11 at 18:39






    • 2





      Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

      – jmbpiano
      Jan 11 at 19:25











    • Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

      – JPhi1618
      Jan 11 at 20:14






    • 2





      The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

      – swbarnes2
      Jan 11 at 22:52














    29












    29








    29







    These are references to Ariel's treasures in The Little Mermaid.




    Ariel has collected many things, each representing a special memory, adventure or a new discovery. She calls them her gadgets, gizmos, whosits, whatsits, and thingamabobs.



    A Wikia



    The Dinglehopper (a.k.a. the fork) is an artifact from the sunken ship which Ariel and Flounder explore early in The Little Mermaid. It is in fact a fairly ordinary object, but Ariel prizes the dinglehopper, as it is an artifact of the human world.




    The Snarfblatt was a smoking pipe but Ariel was told....




    [Scuttle shows Ariel and Flounder a tobacco pipe]



    Scuttle: This, I haven't seen this in years. This is wonderful! A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.



    Ariel and Flounder: Oh!



    Scuttle: Now, the snarfblatt dates back to prehistorical times when humans used to sit around and stare at each other all day. Got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music. Allow me. [blows into it, only to have seaweed and water come out]



    Wikiquote







    share|improve this answer















    These are references to Ariel's treasures in The Little Mermaid.




    Ariel has collected many things, each representing a special memory, adventure or a new discovery. She calls them her gadgets, gizmos, whosits, whatsits, and thingamabobs.



    A Wikia



    The Dinglehopper (a.k.a. the fork) is an artifact from the sunken ship which Ariel and Flounder explore early in The Little Mermaid. It is in fact a fairly ordinary object, but Ariel prizes the dinglehopper, as it is an artifact of the human world.




    The Snarfblatt was a smoking pipe but Ariel was told....




    [Scuttle shows Ariel and Flounder a tobacco pipe]



    Scuttle: This, I haven't seen this in years. This is wonderful! A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.



    Ariel and Flounder: Oh!



    Scuttle: Now, the snarfblatt dates back to prehistorical times when humans used to sit around and stare at each other all day. Got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music. Allow me. [blows into it, only to have seaweed and water come out]



    Wikiquote








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jan 11 at 12:21

























    answered Jan 11 at 12:05









    Paulie_DPaulie_D

    86k16299285




    86k16299285








    • 36





      For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

      – 1006a
      Jan 11 at 17:44






    • 5





      It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

      – SpaceToast
      Jan 11 at 18:39






    • 2





      Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

      – jmbpiano
      Jan 11 at 19:25











    • Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

      – JPhi1618
      Jan 11 at 20:14






    • 2





      The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

      – swbarnes2
      Jan 11 at 22:52














    • 36





      For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

      – 1006a
      Jan 11 at 17:44






    • 5





      It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

      – SpaceToast
      Jan 11 at 18:39






    • 2





      Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

      – jmbpiano
      Jan 11 at 19:25











    • Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

      – JPhi1618
      Jan 11 at 20:14






    • 2





      The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

      – swbarnes2
      Jan 11 at 22:52








    36




    36





    For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

    – 1006a
    Jan 11 at 17:44





    For the benefit of non-native speakers, it might be helpful to point out that gadget and gizmo are both words used for mechanical things when we don't know their real name (or purpose), whosit, whatsit, and thingamabob are words used for anything whose name we don't know or can't think of right now, and dinglehopper and snarfblatt are nonsense words made up for the movie.

    – 1006a
    Jan 11 at 17:44




    5




    5





    It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

    – SpaceToast
    Jan 11 at 18:39





    It might also help to clarify: Ariel discovers human items under the sea, which she brings to Scuttle, a seagull, for identification. Scuttle doesn't really know what they are, so he invents names and uses for the items, because he knows that Ariel can't verify what he says. Probably he just likes her attention.

    – SpaceToast
    Jan 11 at 18:39




    2




    2





    Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

    – jmbpiano
    Jan 11 at 19:25





    Also, to expand on @1006a 's comment- The word "whosit" is understood by native speakers as a contraction of the question "Who is it?" (or possibly "Whose is it?"). Similarly, "whatsit" is a contraction of "What is it?". "Thingamabob", AFAIK, doesn't have any particular expansion other than including the words "thing" and "bob" (see also "bauble").

    – jmbpiano
    Jan 11 at 19:25













    Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

    – JPhi1618
    Jan 11 at 20:14





    Many of these words are also used in one of the more memorable songs of the movie.

    – JPhi1618
    Jan 11 at 20:14




    2




    2





    The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

    – swbarnes2
    Jan 11 at 22:52





    The lyrics to "Part of your world" include "I've got gadgets and gizmos aplenty, I've got whosits and whatsits galore. You want thingamabobs? I got twenty"

    – swbarnes2
    Jan 11 at 22:52











    2














    The shirt is a play on a design meme popular a few years ago, where related words or names are listed in Helvetica font with ampersands in between them, and a period after the last one. (The meme originated with a Beatles T-Shirt designed by a Dutch company.)



    The words on Ariel's shirt all come from The Little Mermaid movie. Ariel likes to collect human artifacts. She calls them her treasures, but doesn't know what they are. She believes her seagull friend Scuttle knows all about humans (he doesn't, of course), and asks him the name and purpose of the things she finds. Since he doesn't actually know any more about humans than she does, the names he gives are nonsense words (dinglehopper, snarfblat) or words used as placeholders when you don't know what something is called (gizmo, whooz-it, whats-it, thingamabob).




    I've got gadgets and gizmos a-plenty

    I've got whoozits and whatzits galore

    You want thingamabobs? I've got twenty!
    "Part of Your World" lyrics




    (From watching that song a few times, I've determined that a gizmo is a pocket watch, and thingamabobs are corkscrews. I can't figure out what object she's holding when she says "gadget" - it's something diamond-shaped at the end of a string. She sings "whoozits" and "whatsits" off-screen, but it's possible one or the other of them is used for eyeglasses, since that's what's shown when she sings those words.)



    Scuttle also tells Ariel utter nonsense about what the items are used for. For example, when Ariel shows him a fork, he says,




    It's a dinglehopper. Humans use these little babies to straighten their hair out. See? Just a little twirl here and a yank there and voila. You've got an aesthetically pleasing configuration of hair that humans go nuts over.
    IMDB




    Similarly, about a smoking pipe:




    Scuttle: I haven't seen this in years, this is wonderful!
    Ariel: What is it?
    Scuttle: A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.
    Ariel, Flounder: Oh.
    Scuttle: You see the snarfblatt dates back to pre-hysterical times when humans would sit around and stare at each other all day.

    [long pause]
    Scuttle: got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music, allow me!
    IMDB







    share|improve this answer




























      2














      The shirt is a play on a design meme popular a few years ago, where related words or names are listed in Helvetica font with ampersands in between them, and a period after the last one. (The meme originated with a Beatles T-Shirt designed by a Dutch company.)



      The words on Ariel's shirt all come from The Little Mermaid movie. Ariel likes to collect human artifacts. She calls them her treasures, but doesn't know what they are. She believes her seagull friend Scuttle knows all about humans (he doesn't, of course), and asks him the name and purpose of the things she finds. Since he doesn't actually know any more about humans than she does, the names he gives are nonsense words (dinglehopper, snarfblat) or words used as placeholders when you don't know what something is called (gizmo, whooz-it, whats-it, thingamabob).




      I've got gadgets and gizmos a-plenty

      I've got whoozits and whatzits galore

      You want thingamabobs? I've got twenty!
      "Part of Your World" lyrics




      (From watching that song a few times, I've determined that a gizmo is a pocket watch, and thingamabobs are corkscrews. I can't figure out what object she's holding when she says "gadget" - it's something diamond-shaped at the end of a string. She sings "whoozits" and "whatsits" off-screen, but it's possible one or the other of them is used for eyeglasses, since that's what's shown when she sings those words.)



      Scuttle also tells Ariel utter nonsense about what the items are used for. For example, when Ariel shows him a fork, he says,




      It's a dinglehopper. Humans use these little babies to straighten their hair out. See? Just a little twirl here and a yank there and voila. You've got an aesthetically pleasing configuration of hair that humans go nuts over.
      IMDB




      Similarly, about a smoking pipe:




      Scuttle: I haven't seen this in years, this is wonderful!
      Ariel: What is it?
      Scuttle: A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.
      Ariel, Flounder: Oh.
      Scuttle: You see the snarfblatt dates back to pre-hysterical times when humans would sit around and stare at each other all day.

      [long pause]
      Scuttle: got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music, allow me!
      IMDB







      share|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2







        The shirt is a play on a design meme popular a few years ago, where related words or names are listed in Helvetica font with ampersands in between them, and a period after the last one. (The meme originated with a Beatles T-Shirt designed by a Dutch company.)



        The words on Ariel's shirt all come from The Little Mermaid movie. Ariel likes to collect human artifacts. She calls them her treasures, but doesn't know what they are. She believes her seagull friend Scuttle knows all about humans (he doesn't, of course), and asks him the name and purpose of the things she finds. Since he doesn't actually know any more about humans than she does, the names he gives are nonsense words (dinglehopper, snarfblat) or words used as placeholders when you don't know what something is called (gizmo, whooz-it, whats-it, thingamabob).




        I've got gadgets and gizmos a-plenty

        I've got whoozits and whatzits galore

        You want thingamabobs? I've got twenty!
        "Part of Your World" lyrics




        (From watching that song a few times, I've determined that a gizmo is a pocket watch, and thingamabobs are corkscrews. I can't figure out what object she's holding when she says "gadget" - it's something diamond-shaped at the end of a string. She sings "whoozits" and "whatsits" off-screen, but it's possible one or the other of them is used for eyeglasses, since that's what's shown when she sings those words.)



        Scuttle also tells Ariel utter nonsense about what the items are used for. For example, when Ariel shows him a fork, he says,




        It's a dinglehopper. Humans use these little babies to straighten their hair out. See? Just a little twirl here and a yank there and voila. You've got an aesthetically pleasing configuration of hair that humans go nuts over.
        IMDB




        Similarly, about a smoking pipe:




        Scuttle: I haven't seen this in years, this is wonderful!
        Ariel: What is it?
        Scuttle: A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.
        Ariel, Flounder: Oh.
        Scuttle: You see the snarfblatt dates back to pre-hysterical times when humans would sit around and stare at each other all day.

        [long pause]
        Scuttle: got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music, allow me!
        IMDB







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        The shirt is a play on a design meme popular a few years ago, where related words or names are listed in Helvetica font with ampersands in between them, and a period after the last one. (The meme originated with a Beatles T-Shirt designed by a Dutch company.)



        The words on Ariel's shirt all come from The Little Mermaid movie. Ariel likes to collect human artifacts. She calls them her treasures, but doesn't know what they are. She believes her seagull friend Scuttle knows all about humans (he doesn't, of course), and asks him the name and purpose of the things she finds. Since he doesn't actually know any more about humans than she does, the names he gives are nonsense words (dinglehopper, snarfblat) or words used as placeholders when you don't know what something is called (gizmo, whooz-it, whats-it, thingamabob).




        I've got gadgets and gizmos a-plenty

        I've got whoozits and whatzits galore

        You want thingamabobs? I've got twenty!
        "Part of Your World" lyrics




        (From watching that song a few times, I've determined that a gizmo is a pocket watch, and thingamabobs are corkscrews. I can't figure out what object she's holding when she says "gadget" - it's something diamond-shaped at the end of a string. She sings "whoozits" and "whatsits" off-screen, but it's possible one or the other of them is used for eyeglasses, since that's what's shown when she sings those words.)



        Scuttle also tells Ariel utter nonsense about what the items are used for. For example, when Ariel shows him a fork, he says,




        It's a dinglehopper. Humans use these little babies to straighten their hair out. See? Just a little twirl here and a yank there and voila. You've got an aesthetically pleasing configuration of hair that humans go nuts over.
        IMDB




        Similarly, about a smoking pipe:




        Scuttle: I haven't seen this in years, this is wonderful!
        Ariel: What is it?
        Scuttle: A banded, bulbous snarfblatt.
        Ariel, Flounder: Oh.
        Scuttle: You see the snarfblatt dates back to pre-hysterical times when humans would sit around and stare at each other all day.

        [long pause]
        Scuttle: got very boring. So they invented this snarfblatt to make fine music, allow me!
        IMDB








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



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        answered Jan 12 at 1:30









        MarthaMartha

        1335




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