REBUS WRITING : representation of a word or syllable
by a picture of an object the name of which resembles in sound the
represented word or syllable. Several rebuses may be combined—in a
single device or successively—to make a phrase or sentence. Literary
rebuses use letters, numbers, musical notes, or specially placed words
to make sentences. Complex rebuses combine pictures and letters. Rebuses
may convey direct meanings, especially to inform or instruct illiterate
people; or they may deliberately conceal meanings, to inform only the
initiated or to puzzle and amuse.
An early form of rebus occurs in picture writings, where abstract
words, difficult to portray, were represented by pictures of objects
pronounced the same way. These are common in Egyptian hieroglyphs and
early Chinese pictographs. Rebus pictures were used to convey names of
towns on Greek and Roman coins or names of families in medieval heraldry
and for instructional symbols in religious art and architecture. In the
Far East, especially in China and Korea, rebus symbols were commonly
employed to carry auspicious wishes.
In Europe, literary rebuses often appeared on family mottoes,
personal seals, ciphers, bookplates, and ultimately in games or riddles.
A familiar English rebus is the debtor’s “IOU,” for “I owe you.”
Popular in the United States after the mid-19th century were rebus
picture puzzles in which the indicated addition or subtraction of
letters in illustrated words produced another word or name. Such picture
riddles have been widely used in advertising promotional contests.
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