Portmanteau is a linguistic blend of two or more words. In French, portmanteau means “suitcase,” implying it holds two or more words inside. We, writers, can use portmanteaus to make our word choice more interesting.
Choose carefully. The last thing we want is to cause confusion.
Even authors like James Joyce, Charles Dickens, and Lewis Carroll created a few portmanteaus that sounded like nonsense, but they worked. In fact, portmanteau first appeared in Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass in a quote from Humpty Dumpty:
“Well, ‘slithy’ means ‘lithe and slimy’ and ‘mimsy’ is ‘flimsy and miserable’. You see it’s like a portmanteau—there are two meanings packed up into one word.”
A master of wordplay and creative word choice, Carroll created an entirely new genre of etymology in one quote. Portmanteau itself is even a portmanteau. It combines the words “porter,” which means “to carry,” and “manteau,” which means “cloak.”
Other portmanteaus have bled into everyday speech, like brunch (lunch + breakfast).
If you go back far enough into any word’s etymology, you’ll find any number of portmanteaus that helped create it.
Common Examples of Portmanteaus
Smog = smoke + fog
Motel = motor + hotel
Infomercial = information + commercial
Spork = spoon + fork
Podcast = iPod + broadcast
Glamping = glamorous + camping
Webinar = web + seminar
Chortle = chuckle + snort
Dramedy = drama + comedy
Listicle = article + list
Newscast = news + broadcast
Pokémon = pocket + monsters
Prequel = previous + sequel
Romcom = romance + comedy
Sitcom = situation + comedy
Telethon = television + marathon
Cosplay = costume + roleplay
Biopic = biography + picture
Bollywood = Bombay + Hollywood
Mockumentary = mock + documentary
Edutainment = education + entertainment
Botox = botulism + toxin
Brexit = Britain + exit
Affluenza = affluent + influenza
Juneteenth = June + nineteenth
Medicare = medical + care
Obamacare = Barack Obama + healthcare
Reaganomics = Ronald Reagan + economics
Ampersand = and + per se + and
Dumbfounded = dumb + confounded
Electrocute = electricity + execute
Flare = flair + glare
Fortnight = fourteen + night
Gerrymander = Elbridge Gerry + salamander
Shepherd = sheep + herder
Splatter = splash + spatter
Squander = scatter + wander (time, money, or opportunity)
Stash = store + cache
Taxicab = taximeter + cabriolet
Velcro = velvet + crochet
Adware = advertising + software
Animatronics = animation + electronics
Bionic = biology + electronic
Bit = binary + digit
Blog = web + log
Breathalyzer = breath + analyzer
Cyborg = cybernetic + organism
Email = electronic + mail
Emoticon = emotion + icon
Intercom = internal + communication
Malware = malicious + software
Modem = modulator + demodulator
Pixel = picture + element
Celebrity Coupling Portmanteaus
Brangelina = Brad Pitt + Angelina Joele
Kimye = Kim Kardashian + Kanye West
J-Rod = Jennifer Lopez + Alex Rodriguez
Lesser-Known Portmanteaus with Definitions
Brony = brother + My Little Pony — male fandom of the My Little Pony series
Movember = Mo + November — an awareness month where men grow facial hair to raise money for men’s health organizations
Ebonics = ebony + phonics — a common dialect in the American Black community
Stagflation = stagnation + inflation — continuous period of high inflation and unemployment
Pizzagate, Russiagate, Monicagate, Weinergate, etc. — The media creates portmanteaus with the word Watergate to imply an event is scandalous.
Imagineer = imagine + engineer — an engineer who works on creative projects
Netiquette = network + etiquette — proper online etiquette
Food Portmanteaus
Cronut = croissant + doughnut
Frappuccino = frappe + cappuccino
Froyo = frozen + yogurt
Grapple = grape + apple
Mocktail = mock + cocktail
Popsicle = pop + icicle
Pluot or Plumcot = plum + apricot (sounds delicious)
Spam = spiced + ham
Tofurky = tofu + turkey
Crossbred Dogs
Aussiedoodle = Australian Shepherd + Poodle
Chug = Chihuahua + Pug
Cockapoo = Cocker Spaniel + Poodle
Horgi = Huskey + Corgi
Labradoodle = Labrador + Poodle
Maltipoo = Maltese + Poodle
Pitsky = Pit Bull + Husky
Puggle = Pug + Beagle
Other Animal Portmanteaus
(usually bred in captivity)
Beefalo or Cattalo = buffalo + cow
Cama = camel + llama
Coywolf = coyote + wolf
Wolfdog = wolf + domestic dog
Geep = goat + sheep
Grolar Bear = grizzly + polar bear (Imagine the size of this bear!)
Liger or Tigion = lion + tiger
Wallaroo = wallaby + kangaroo
Wholphin = false killer whale (not orca; they’re long, slender dolphins that resemble orca in skull structure, black head, and markings, though with gray tones instead of white) + dolphin
Zonkey = zebra + donkey (Coincidentally, I’m on the waitlist to rescue/adopt a micro-mini version)
Conversational Portmanteaus
Athleisure = athletic + leisure
Brainiac = brain + maniac
Bromance = bro/brother + romance
Chillax = chill + relax
Fauxhawk = faux + mohawk (hairstyle)
Frenemy = friend + enemy
Ginormous = gigantic/giant + enormous
Guesstimate = guess + estimate
Hangry = hungry + angry
Jeggings = jeans + leggings
Mansplain = man + explain
Sheeple = sheep + people
Snark = snide + remark
Staycation = stay + vacation
Threepeat = three + repeat
Twerk = twist + jerk
Another common portmanteau is alcoholic + something addictive (workaholic, shopaholic, chocoholic, etc.) It’s so commonly used, many people believe -holic is a suffix for “addiction,” when in reality, it’s a conversational portmanteau.
Portmanteaus are not compound words. Compound words like “notebook” or “football” or “sunflower” use two words to create one, where portmanteaus shorten one or more words in a creative way.
TKZers, did you realize all these words were portmanteaus? Get those creative juices pumping and give us a new portmanteau! Or add to the list.





In novels with well-named characters, grandparents and great-grandparents will most likely have boomer names. Their children, the ones now driving the old folks to their doctor appointments, will probably have Gen-X names. And those parents may be wondering what the heck Kai means, and if it’s a boy’s name or a girl’s. (According to nameberry.com it’s gender-neutral, though most Kais are boys. Kai is a Hawaiian name usually associated with the sea.)
Here are three names I’ll never use for major characters I like:




Recently, I made some major changes to the wip. As in totally abandoning one thread of my female protagonist and replacing it with another. I’d written 14 chapters and was at the 13K word mark when I realized my heroine’s back story wasn’t working, and I was heading down a dark, winding road that didn’t seem to lead where I needed it to go. I knew the main conflict she was going to be dealing with, but the path we’d started on wasn’t getting there.


Escalation
Lindsey Hughes loves helping people discover their superpower, create compelling content, and feel excited about pitching and networking. She teaches how to pitch like a boss, network like a VIP, and write like an Oscar winner.






