Tropes for ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'', Season Two.

!!Examples:

* AmusingInjuries: In "Aldrin Justice" Barney dislocates his hip while having sex with Marshall's law professor.
* {{Angrish}}: In "The Scorpion and the Toad", when Ted hears how well Lily has been doing without Marshall, he has a moment of incoherence out of anger.
* AnswerCut: In the first episode of the second season, Marshall has some relationship problems. Robin has an answer, which prompts Barney to ask "What's your prescription, Dr. Estrogen? Eat Häagen-Dazs and watch ''Love Actually'' 'til your period synchs up?" [[TheLadette Robin being Robin]] cures Marshall's depression with some target shooting.
* AutoErotica: Twice in "Moving Day". First attempted by Barney and his GirlOfTheWeek, then by Ted and Robin. Both times at a truck.
* BarbieDollAnatomy: "Columns" sees Barney pay Lily to draw a picture of him nude, who then proceeds to deliberately leave out his genitalia. Barney evens compares it to Ken in his anger.
* BathOfPoverty: To highlight Lily's utterly abysmal apartment, the most notable part of the apartment was that the stove, oven, sink, and refrigerator (or "stovenkerator") were all one piece of furniture... and located next to the toilet and bathtub.
* BavarianFireDrill: "It's for the bride."
* BedTrick: Barney does this in most of the episodes, but most memorably in "Ted Mosby: Architect" when he [[spoiler: pretends to be Ted]] to prove that architecture is a sexy career. This episode also utilizes UnreliableNarrator, since the audience and Robin both think [[spoiler: it actually is Ted having this wild night]] until the very end.
* TheBet: The Slap Bet over whether Robin is married and/or did porn. Despite neither of them winning, Marshall ended up winning the right to slap Barney in the face five times. The effects of this bet continue to be felt years down the line.
* BittersweetEnding: Ted and Robin were still getting on fine, but they'd been ignoring the major issue that both of them had completely different life plans, and realised they couldn't do so forever, as Ted summarises himself "We have an expiration date, don't we?". Although it was inevitable from the start, and although Ted is feeling optimistic about returning to single life, there's still something sad about knowing his relationship with the woman he spent all of Season 1 seducing is over for good.
* BrokenRecord: Barney in "Something Blue"--"Tell people what? Tell people what? Tell people what?..."
* ButHeSoundsHandsome:
** "Moving Day": in the midst of moving in with Robin, the van with Ted's stuff is stolen, and the culprit calls Ted and gives him instructions on how to get them back. Of course, Ted knows exactly who it is.
--->'''Ted:''' Barney...\\
'''Barney:''' I'm not Barney! But I hear that guy's awesome.
** It then gets an IronicEcho when Ted finds the van and takes it back, with Barney and his date inside:
--->'''Ted:''' Enjoying the ride?\\
'''Barney:''' Ted? Ted, you let us out of here! Let us out of here this instant!\\
'''Ted:''' This isn't Ted, but I hear that guy's awesome.
* ButterflyOfDoom: In "Lucky Penny", the story has Ted try to figure out who's reponsible for causing him to miss the plane heading to his dream job interview. Turns out it was actually ''his'' fault, having found an antique penny on the subway several months earlier.
* BystanderSyndrome: PlayedForLaughs in the episode "Lucky Penny". Barney has run the New York City Marathon without training and enjoys his free ride on the subway, showing off his medal. However, his legs stop working and he can't get off. Barney gets insulted for not giving up his seat for other people (an old woman, a pregnant woman and a boy with crutches). He calls Ted to come to pick him up, but Ted doesn't manage it on time so Barney is trapped there and is riding from end to end over and over. In TheTag, he's seen still riding on the empty subway. ''Nobody'' would help him.
* CatchphraseInterruptus: Barney's "Legendary" was interrupted again in "How Lily Stole Christmas". Barney is sick with the flu, and starts to say it, but falls asleep after "wait for it...". He picks it up perfectly when he is jolted awake.
* ChekhovsGun: Played straight: "Slap Bet".
* ChekhovsSkill: It was established in the previous season that Marshall is so good at board games that the gang make him run game night, otherwise no one else would ever win. This comes up again [[spoiler:this season when Marshall comprehends and helps Barney win an inexplicable Chinese gambling game in "Atlantic City."]]
* ChewOutFakeOut: Spousal instead of parental. Marshall loudly rebukes Lily for forgoing her morals for cash (accepting money to paint a nude picture of Barney). In between his chastisements, he whispers to her that he's actually glad she found a way to get so much cash and is criticizing her as loudly as possible so that Barney, in the next room, will come back in and offer even more money.
* {{Cliffhanger}}: The season ends before Barney completes his "Legen-Wait-for-it-dary!" CatchPhrase. It cuts after "Wait for it."
* ComicallyMissingThePoint: At the end of "The Brunch", Ted and Robin are talking to his parents to learn why [[spoiler:they got divorced]]. The parents briefly describe their courtship to illustrate why their marriage [[spoiler:was doomed from the start]] and there are some eerie parallels with Ted's courtship of Robin, a fact that is clearly not lost on Ted, judging by his expression. After his parents leave, Robin excitedly exclaims, "Your parents like me!"
* ComplexityAddiction: 'We thought of authentic Native American headdress before we thought of a hat?'
* CountryMatters: WordOfGod says this is the word Ted changes to "grinch" when talking to his kids.
* DidYouJustHaveSex: In the Season 2 premiere, Barney is excited because he thinks that he, Ted, and Marshall are all single at the same time, and while he's giving a speech about how awesome their singledom will be, he takes a close look at Robin and Ted and groans "Aww man, you guys did it, didn't you?"
** And further (inverted?): Barney's suite of superpowers includes the ability to tell how long it's been since a woman has had sex.
* DiscriminateAndSwitch: S2 Ep 10, "Single Stamina" introduces Barney's gay brother, James (Wayne Brady). While Barney is initially shown being fine with James's homosexuality, he gets angry when James reveals he and his partner are planning to get married. While it first at seems Barney is against same-sex marriage, it turns out he's just against marriage ''in general'', lamenting that once gay men start getting married, everyone else will get married, too (because whatever gay people do, everyone else starts doing six months later), and single life as we know it will be ruined. He eventually accepts it, telling James's adopted baby at the reception, "Just because you're their kid, doesn't mean you have to accept ''their'' lifestyle."
* DisproportionateRetribution: During the "Slap Bet" episode, Barney slaps Marshall when he thinks he's won. He hasn't. As a result, he is given the choice of 5 slaps at any time, or 10 in a row. This is particularly bad because Marshall had earlier done the exact same thing... then lied and tried to hide the evidence that he was wrong. [[KarmaHoudini His punishment was only three slaps]]. Possibly justified within the episode. Lily says that Barney gets to slap Marshall three times, once because he lied and twice because he prematurely slapped Barney. When she says that Marshall gets to slap Barney, it's because he slapped Marshall without permission of the Slap Bet Commissioner (Lily), and seeing as she views her Slap Bet Commissioner powers as SeriousBusiness, it's understandable that she would see Barney's transgression as the more serious one.
* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything:
** In "Arrivederci, Fiero", the car is treated like it's dying. The car is even personified and referred to by personal pronouns, although there is a disagreement on the gender.
** In Robin's story, the way she and Lily try to clean up the car after they spilled Thai food inside it is like they're trying to remove evidence of a murder, a reference to a scene in ''Film/PulpFiction''.
** The gang "outing" Barney's gay brother as "monogamous".
* DontLookAtMe: Barney says this to Robin in "How Lily Stole Christmas" when he's forced to wear track-pants instead of a suit while he's sick with the flu.
* DrinkingGame: Ted has an in-universe Superbowl drinking game, though Barney's thoughts are rather accurate: "It's not a game if you drink any time anything happens."
* EekAMouse: It's easy not to notice it, but in "First Time in New York", Robin gets freaked out by a spider and asks Ted to kill it. Barney, who is nearby, practically leaps off the couch and leaves the apartment with the hurried excuse "I left something in the hallway!" Then when he comes back in, Ted realizes the spider is still alive, and Barney abandons all pretense, just speeding out the door yelling "Run!"
* EasilyForgiven: Averted. Even though Lily's back by the end of the first episode, Marshall isn't so willing to have her back after the way she dumped him the previous spring. They don't actually reconcile until the seventh episode.
** In "How Lily Stole Christmas," it's revealed that it took Ted even longer to forgive her for abandoning her friends and leaving him to clean up the mess she left of Marshall.
* FakeIdentityBaggage: In "Where Were We?", Marshall is depressed over his break up with Lily. He checks her online credit statement and discovers charges for a hotel in New York. Thinking Lily is seeing another guy, Marshall goes to the hotel room and punches out the guy who answers the door. It turns out that the guy isn't Lily's boyfriend and Lily wasn't dating anyone at all; the man Marshall hit was an identity thief who had stolen Lily's credit card and was making purchases in her name.
* FalseCause: The fifteenth episode of this season takes the show's central fallacy up to eleven. It's all about finding out who's at fault for Ted being late to the airport. First Ted blames himself for jumping a turnstyle, then he blames Barney for making him do it, then he blames Marshall, then he blames...
* {{Foreshadowing}}: A scene early on in "Showdown" had Ted and Robin walk in covered in pasta sauce and, before they can explain, Lily brushes it off. Also, the blue french horn isn't on Robin's mantle. Both of these tie into Ted and Robin breaking up, as revealed in "Something Blue".
* Franks2000InchTV: Barney has two of these in his apartment, with each one taking up an entire wall. Supposedly the pain of watching it "never goes away".
* GameShowAppearance: Barney, on ''Series/ThePriceIsRight''.
* GenerationXerox: Ted's parents reveal the reasons their relationship fell apart over ''exactly'' the same issue that causes tension between Ted and Robin, ie. having children. Particularly noticable when in the same scene, both couples are shown wearing identical colours to their counterpart.
* GilliganCut: "Slap Bet" invokes this twice.
** Ted tells the group to respect that Robin doesn't like malls and that it shouldn't be their concern. Cut to the two of them in bed, and he's asking her what her problem with them is.
** Lily and Marshall remind Ted that he promised Robin he'd respect her privacy, which he agrees to. Cut to their apartment where they're playing ''TabletopGame/{{Scrabble}}'' and Ted misspells "husband" and ends up asking her if she's married.
** And in "Lucky Penny":
-->'''Marshall:''' Well, it looks like "Barney" should be coming over the Queensborough bridge and up First Avenue within the next hour or so, but there is no way that that's really him.\\
''(cut to them outside the finish line of the marathon)''\\
'''Ted:''' That's really him! ''(Barney then waves to them while passing by and finishes)''
* GoodWithNumbers: When Barney goes on ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'', he knows the exact price of absolutely every prize on the show, and can also quickly add up the prices of everything in his final showcase in order to walk off with every prize. He also knew the exact cost of his opponent's showcase, just to top it off.
* HypocriticalHumor: In "How Lily Stole Christmas," Lily says this to Ted:
-->'''Lily:''' If one of my kindergarteners used that kind of language, I'd be on the phone with their parents.\\
'''Ted:''' I'm not a kindergartener.\\
'''Lily:''' Exactly. You're an adult, you know what that word means. You know how hurtful name-calling can be. ({{beat}}) Assface.
* ICallHimMisterHappy: ''Barnito Supreme'', [[HurricaneOfEuphemisms among others]].
* InstantAwesomeJustAddMecha Barney's play "Suck it, Lily". [[spoiler:"The robot falls in love"]].
* IronicEcho: "This isn't Ted, but I hear that guy's awesome." Not ''technically'' the exact same phrase ("Barney" substituted by "Ted")
* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: Ted's daughter complains in the season 2 premiere that it feels like he's been talking for a whole year.
* MadeOutToBeAJerkass: In "Columns", Ted has to deal with his boss-turned-employee who constantly mocks his ideas, resulting in Ted deciding to fire him. After a series of circumstances that leave Ted too guilty to do it, he finally does, but just when the guy's having a heart attack. As a result, everyone in the office hated Ted. Ted even hinted that the paramedics weren't fond of him either.
* ManlyTears: In "Ted Mosby: Architect", all the guys tear up when discussing the end of ''Film/FieldOfDreams''.
* MissedTheBus: Ted missed a plane to Chicago for a super important job interview. He thought it was his destiny to get his dream job. He and Robin contemplate what lead to them missing that flight. Had Ted got that job, he would have had to eventually relocate to Chicago. This way he stayed in New York and met his future wife.
* MultipleChoiceFormLetter: In "Ted Mosby: Architect", Barney uses one that claims he is a ghost to explain why he is not around to girls who he sleeps with and then leaves before they wake up in the morning. He simply fills in their name in the blanks.
* MyOwnPrivateIDo: [[spoiler: Lily and Marshall]] of the Plan First, Elope Later variety. But they bring the important people with them.
* NarrativeProfanityFilter: In "How Lily Stole Christmas"
* NoodleImplements: All we know about the stripper's act at Marshall's bachelor party is that she ''explicitly'' told Barney not to use the smoke machine while she was on the hippety-hop. And that it involved a typewriter at some point.
* OnceMoreWithClarity: "Something Blue" reveals why Ted and Robin arrived at the apartment covered in pasta sauce near the beginning of "Showdown". Long story short, Ted and Robin broke up.
* OverthetopChristmasDecorations: Lily and Marshall are big fans of Christmas and their and Ted's apartment is owerblown with lights and other dreamy winter wonderland decorations. It's taken up to eleven when Lily gets angry with Ted and takes all the stuff to her tiny crappy apartment.
* PornStash: Barney's quite open about his, partly so that when his conquests see it after sleeping with him they will want to [[NotStayingForBreakfast leave as fast as possible]].
-->'''Barney:''' Some guys hide their porn. I have mine professionally lit.
* PullingTheThread: In the episode "Slap Bet" Robin reveals she has an unusual fear of going to the mall but refuses to tell why. The others form theories as to why this is. Marshall believes it's because she's been married before and had the wedding in a mall. Robin decides to use this as her cover story. Ted tests her on it by asking her numerous detailed questions about the wedding, all of which Robin easily answers but gives herself away when she can't think of the answer to the easiest question, the name of the groom.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: After 56 days of Marshall's depression over Lily leaving him, Ted gives one to him when he asks why he can't go beg her to take him back:
-->'''Ted:''' BECAUSE YOU'RE PATHETIC! I'm sorry. But right now, you are NOT Marshall. You are the miserable, whining, shampoo-sniffing ghost of Marshall and frankly, a guy like you doesn't have a shot in hell with a girl like Lily. You know who might have a shot somewhere down the line? ''Marshall''. The REAL Marshall. But if you go down there now like this, you'll blow it for him and he's never gonna forgive you. Of course, whatever I say, you just will do the opposite so, have a great weekend! Good luck screwing up your life.
* RomanceInducingSmudge: Parodied in the episode "World's Greatest Couple", where Brad freaks out Marshall at dinner by licking his napkin and wiping a smudge of food off his face.
* RomanticSpoonfeeding: "Something Blue" has the wedding tradition version of the trope. Marshal and Lily try to feed each other at their wedding with the cake. Lily is completely drunk and sees Marshal's face twice or thrice, and she falls down.
* SexWithTheEx: Marshall and Lily in "Brunch".
* SexyShirtSwitch: Robin buys a bikini shirt in "Atlantic City", which turns Ted on. At the end of the episode he walks out of his room with it on.
-->'''Lily:''' Is Robin here?\\
'''Marshall:''' God, I hope so.
* ShoutOut: "SWARLEY!!" Cue the ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' theme song. And the ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' credits font.
* SkipToTheEnd: Slightly varied during Marshall and Lily's wedding in that Barney, who is acting as the minister, is the one who tries to speed up the ceremony in order to try and hide the fact that he's [[TenderTears crying]]. He doesn't hide it very well.
* SpringtimeForHitler: Subverted in "World's Greatest Couple", Barney shows Lily that his apartment is designed to stop women from wanting to stay there long. Unfortunately, one woman doesn't care about the small comforter on the bed, the lack of extra towels ("I don't buy into the myth that we need to shower every day"), the lack of coffee, ("You may as well drink the tears of a Colombian peasant farmer".) or his professionally-lighted porn collection ("Wow, you're so open with your sexuality"). What finally drives her away is Lily, who the girl assumes is Barney's wife, walking into the apartment.
* StealthHiBye: Parodied when Barney does this to Marshall on "The Scorpion & The Toad". [[spoiler: He just went to the bathroom]].
* StockFootage: As of "Where Were We," the second season premiere, it's the same shot of the kids staring straight into the camera. Presumably because, seeing as it's not supposed to be taking Future Ted five years to tell his story, they're NotAllowedToGrowUp. However, while most episodes use shots of the children after the show was being produced, some episodes (most notably "Last Cigarette Ever") use footage from the pilot, in which the children are wearing different clothing.
* TakeThat: Ted, Barney, and Marshall have the follwing exchange, while at a coffee shop, in [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer the literal start]] of "Swarley":
-->'''Ted:''' So I guess that decides it.\\
'''Marshall:''' Yep.\\
'''Barney:''' [[Series/{{Friends}} Hanging out at a coffee place]] is not nearly as much fun as hanging out in a bar.
** WordOfGod has sheepishly acknowledged this, insisting that they didn't realize that they were insulting ''Series/{{Friends}}''.
** A proposal to go to a techno club:
-->'''[[ItMakesSenseInContext Ted!Barney:]]''' Hey, Marshall! You up for some super-loud, repetitive music that hasn't changed since the mid-90s?
* TheyreCalledPersonalIssuesForAReason: Robin doesn't want to talk about the mall.
** Also the friends keep quiet about Barney's misconception that Bob Barker is his father.
* TrustMeImAnX: "Ted Mosby, architect. Trust me."
* UnderdressedForTheOccasion: When the gang goes to a funeral, Barney shows up in sweats because he believes that suits are joyful, only meant for the living, and have no place at a sad occasion such as a funeral.
* TheUnfairSex: Averted in "Ted Mosby: Architect." When Robin thinks Ted is cheating on her (in reality, [[spoiler: Barney has been pretending to be Ted]]), she blames herself because she refused to listen to his work problems earlier.
* VertigoEffect: Used in "Something Blue", when Barney [[spoiler:thinks that Ted got Robin pregnant.]]
* WallGlower: Lily at the end of "Where Were We?"
* WeddingFinale: The last two episodes happen during [[spoiler: Marshall and Lily's wedding day]].
* WhamEpisode:
** "Swarley": Marshall and Lily get back together.
** "Something Blue": Marshall and Lily get married, and [[spoiler: Ted and Robin break up]].
* WhereEverybodyKnowsYourFlame: The cast accompanies Barney to here as he tries to get a date for his brother.
* [[QuirkyWork Wicket]]: LET'S GO THE MALL!!
* WithThisRing: Ted and [[spoiler: Robin]] experience an interesting inversion of both Types 3 and 6 when [[spoiler: they accidentally receive the wrong glasses of champagne and Robin finds an engagement ring in her glass. She freaks out and even though it was an accident, it leads to their breakup.]]
* XCalledTheyWantTheirYBack: Subverted. When mocking some pants Marshall wants to wear, Ted says "[=BelBivDevoe=] called, and ''not even they'' want those pants back."
** "What's this? A guy in a toga[[note]][[AncientGrome Roman, not Greek]][[/note]] just walked in and handed me a parchment! It's ancient Greece; they want their idea back!"
* {{Yandere}}: Barney says you can tell a girl is {{Yandere}} by seeing if she has "crazy eyes." He says this of a girl Marshall is going out with when he introduces her to the group. The entire episode is of Marshall wondering what Barney says is true with evidence piling up, but in the end it's revealed that it was the work of Lily, Marshall's ex-fiance. Marshall finds it endearing and they get back together. The episode ends with previous girl proving to be Yandere after all.
** Lily was also totally Yandere in that same episode.
** There's the girl who Barney romanced in "Ted Mosby: Architect". Her 'song' eventually becomes "I love you, we have something beautiful, I know this is a rough patch but come meet my parents, you're amazing, I HATE YOU, WHY DID YOU LEAVE I WANT YOU TO DIE, I'M GOING TO KILL YOU, I'VE DONE IT BEFORE". Apparently, not every Yandere is to be avoided in Barney's Playbook.
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