!FridgeBrilliance
* Remember how Lady's owners were referred to as Jim Dear and Darling? (Like even in associated books, etc...) If you also thought "well that's sort of a strange name...", it makes sense when you realize that those aren't their real names--they're what they call each other. As Lady knows them from only the privacy of their shared home, it makes sense that she would hear only these terms of endearment as "names" and probably assume that is what their names are.
** They're [[{{Pun}} pet names]]
* Tramp is a mutt, but he looks like he's got a lot of terrier in him. Terriers are ''rat catchers.''
* Aunt Sarah believing Lady to be responsible for the mess downstairs that the cats caused. Besides their WoundedGazelleGambit, she had [[VillainHasAPoint good reason]] to believe it was Lady. The main one being that Siamese cats ''don't behave like that'' in real life.
* Tramp being falsely condemned as a threat to the baby, only to be exonerated when the dead rat is found, is actually pretty close to the French tale of "Saint" Guinefort, a medieval greyhound venerated around Lyon until the 1930s. In that account, the dog kills a snake in defense of a nobleman's baby son, but is killed by its master when the man finds the boy's cot overturned and the dog with bloodied jaws. Finding the dead snake and the unharmed child moments later, the repentant knight erects a shrine to his unjustly-slain pet, and local peasants who visit it to praise the unfortunate HeroicDog soon start reporting miracles akin to those of human saints.
* Lady looks extra shocked when she initially meets Bull in the pound. Of course she'd be- she's been around purebreeds her whole life, yet finds that most of her cellmates are purebreeds: a Bulldog, Pekingese, Russian Wolfhound and Chihuahua. Lady probably thought the pound only had stray mutts like Tramp.
** Also, the reason poor Lady is so distraught when she shares her experience at the pound with Tramp is because she second-hand witnessed a dog being taken to be put down, the equivalent of watching a man being sent to the chair. Of course her experience at the dog pound was horrible. It goes against everything she and Trusty and Jock believe in humans being "dog's best friend".
* Tramp has a reputation for having a lot of previous "girlfriends," a statement a child would take at face value, while an adult would understand that he was a stray who impregnated a lot of neighborhood dogs. In short, [[ReallyGetsAround he really]] ''[[ReallyGetsAround is]]'' [[ReallyGetsAround kind of a tramp.]]
* Trusty losing his sense of smell, and yet still finding the dog-catcher makes more sense than it would seem. It makes sense he'd have that reputation if he'd been retired due to having lost sufficient ability to track criminals (who are known to actively try and cover their scent) but tracking something as smelly as multiple horses and a familiar unwashed dog which left tracks only minutes old is significantly easier. Also, the ground was wet with puddles, and damp ground retains scents better than dry ground.

!FridgeHorror
* Tramp's impression of what happens when a baby arrives is funny in some points. However, where did he get this knowledge?
-->"The voice of experience buster--move over."
** I took it that he was already owned at some point or, to the least, knew some dogs that were and were thrown out when a new baby arrived, which seemed common back then.
** [[Film/LadyAndTheTramp2019 The 2019 live-action version]] confirms that Tramp was, indeed, [[TearJerker abandoned as a puppy when his owners had a new baby.]]
* The scene with Lady in the doghouse, and Jock and Trusty come over to offer some comfort. Younger audiences will see it as the two offering to take Lady into their homes, where she'll be away from Aunt Sarah and treated well; older audiences will realize that Jock and Trusty were actually offering to marry Lady in order to preserve her honor, especially with the implication that she had become pregnant after her night with Tramp, AND with the knowledge that he was a womanizer.[[note]] In fact this is the dialogue spoken in the movie.[[/note]] The movie is set in a time period when it was considered shameful for a woman to be an unwed mother, and the only way to save her reputation was if a man of high social standing agreed to marry her.
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