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Fang Thpeak
(aka: Fang Induced Lisp)

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"The teeth, I had to put fangs in. I didn’t want to, but I was told to. I went to an orthodontist, and they put in these fangs, with a bit of plasticine, but I found it very hard to speak, very hard to speak clearly, so I took the bottom ones out after a while. Bad continuity, that."
Anthony Ainley on Doctor Who, "Survival"

A speech impediment that strikes vampires (and other fanged creatures, as well), where their spoken s's become th's or, more often, sh's.

Here's the technical explanation for why it happens: False teeth tend to cause sibilants (s; soft c, like the first c in "circus"; and sometimes z) to be mispronounced because the prosthetics force a change in the position of the tongue. Interdentals (th) are made by the tongue going against the upper incisors - sibilants are more likely to be mispronounced as interdentals when the incisors are altered or missing, as with fake buck teeth or missing front teethnote  More common with prosthetic fangs are for the sibilants to become post-alveolar fricatives (sh), caused by the tongue being forced back by the wider and longer canines.

Fang Thpeak can be called to the audience's attention in two ways:

  1. When the writers make no effort to avoid sibilants, charactersh who have fangsh will alwaysh shpeak thish way, or,
  2. When the people writing the show, having one actor (or more) who wears a fang prosthetic, go out of their way to try to write dialogue avoiding the letter "S". An attempt of that nature will very likely end with the character having a rather odd vocabulary and pattern of word choice. And the sibilants that do get through are glaring.

Can be avoided by the actors just redubbing the offending voices over later (without the problematic prosthetics), but episodic tv shows don't always have the time or the budget for that.

The same thing happens to a slightly lesser degree to people who wear upper dentures, and orthodontic retainers. Again, it's the mouthpiece interfering with the position of the tongue.

Other consistent mispronunciations include ventriloquists substituting g or v for b, and f for p — it's nearly impossible to pronounce a b or p sound without noticeable movement of the lips.

Related to Vampire Vords and Sssssnake Talk. Compare to Funetik Aksent. Not to be confused with Fan Speak.


Exampleth:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 

    Comic Bookth 
  • Many kids in the Asterix comics speak like this, including kid-ified versions of most of the main cast in the Flashback story How Obelix Fell into the Magic Potion.
  • Batman: Mr. Scarface has this problem, pronouncing all 'B's as 'G's. This is because he's actually a ventriloquist dummy who's the Split Personality of Arnold Wesker (appropriately nicknamed the Ventriloquist), and Batman has used it to figure out his identity a few times when Scarface tries to pretend that he's somebody not made of wood. (In another story in which Wesker takes on a different masked identity, Robin figures out who he is when he realizes that this villain is avoiding words with B's.) This speech impediment was not carried over to Scarface's appearances in Batman: The Animated Series or The Batman (2004), since it was deemed too awkward.
  • In one of the Cinema Purgatorio stories, "Code Pru", Prudence meets a vampire who talks like this.
  • In Empowered, the villain King Tyrant Lizard (a human turned intelligent dinosaur) and the hero Homunculoid talk like this; the former has a tyrannosaur's jaws and teeth, the latter has oversized lips and tongue.
  • The Beast in Fables, whenever his curse is only partially in effect — he's got fangs but not a big enough mouth to fit them in, so they get in the way.
  • The Cafou, a giant, talking saber-toothed cat in Les Lumières de l'Amalou, has a fang-induced lisp.
  • In The Multiversity, this is how the snake Sivana speaks, very much averting Sssssnake Talk.
  • Krurgor from Ythaq belongs to a race that can basically be described as bipedal walrusses, including speech-hindering fangs.

    Comic Thtripth 
  • In Calvin and Hobbes, Calvin mentions that saber-toothed tigers probably talked like this and says they went most definitely extinct because they couldn't understand what they were saying. Hobbes is not amused by Calvin disrespecting his ancestors like this.
  • Mooch the cat in Mutts. He has a speech impediment that causes him to insert an "sh" into words when he "shpeaks", such as "yesh" (yes), "shmilk" (milk), and "shmousie" (mousie).

    Fan Workth 
  • Chrysalis Visits The Hague has a bad grammatical case of this; It's largely justified when ponies are holding platters and swords in their mouths, but that doesn't explain why any character's speech is reduced to comical "shlurs" when they have as much as a single cigarette between their lips. Edith's subtler slurring is justified at least, since a falling rock almost ends up breaking her jaw.
  • Kate and Sophie have a variant of this due to their boxing mouth guards in Well-Matched.

    Filmth — Animation 
  • Poppy Prescott from Despicable Me 4 occasionally speaks this way due to having braces in her mouth, especially during her encounter with Gru at night.
  • The protagonist of Last Year's Snow Was Falling speaks this way (Lost in Translation, unfortunately). No explanation is given, but the condition is permanent. Possibly a parody of the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, who suffered from throat cancer.

    Filmth — Live-Action 
  • Planet of the Apes (2001) fell into this with a lot of the ape actors. Tim Roth had it particularly bad, and his character's name was Thade. That's rough. Averted, per Word of God, in the same film with Paul Giamatti, who specifically requested the fake teeth ahead of time for his character, so he could practice with them. Consequently, when not overdubbed, his lines are much clearer than the other apes.
  • In the Cast Commentary for Van Helsing, Richard Roxburgh mentions that the fake fangs he wore would interfere with many of his lines, creating a goofy lisp even in the most dramatic scenes, and how they sometimes had to ADR many of his lines.
    Dracula: [After being stabbed, to no effect, by a silver stake] Ith thith your thilver thtake?
  • Warcraft (2016) has Garona, even if they're only in her lower jaw. Honest Trailers even highlights that among all the teeth regarding Orcs, there's "the prosthetic teeth this actress can barely speak through".
  • WNUF Halloween Special has a scene where a costumed audience outside of a haunted house is being asked about the house's history. A tall, scared-looking man in a vampire costume, complete with cheap plastic fangs, says, "Shomebody died in thish houshe?"

    Literature 
  • Betsy Taylor from Betsy the Vampire Queen thpeakth like thith.
  • Igors in the Discworld series have a 'lithp', due to their familial similarity to, well, The Igor. It's just an affectation, however, because their typical employers tend to expect it, and most Igors tend to be as skilled in orthodontics as they are in all other manners of surgery. Igorinas typically lisp less than their male counterparts, and the one the Ankh-Morpork Watch hires forgets to even bother on occasion.
  • The Parasol Protectorate: Vampires consider "fang-lisping" to be the height of vulgarity, and are swift to train new larvae out of it as before letting them out in public. At the beginning of the series, the fact that the mysterious vampire that attacks Alexia was lisping is one of the signs that there was something abnormal about him.
  • Lampshaded in Red Dragon: Dolarhyde has a corrected harelip and cleft palate and avoids sibilant words, for example, always using "Mmm-hmm" instead of "Yes."

    Live-Action TV 
  • Vir Cotto from Babylon 5 originally sported large canine teeth like all other Centauri, but they quickly disappeared because it made the actor talk like this.
  • Big Wolf on Campus:
    • Brandon Quinn, who played the heroic werewolf, Tommy Dawkins, usually managed to avoid an obvious lisp while wearing the fangs, but sometimes it would slip through.
    • Parodied in the season 3 episode, "Everybody Fang Chung Tonight", after being turned into a vampire, Merton stumbles over his sibilants while trying to make a dramatic speech because he's not used to the fangs.
  • In the DVD commentary for the first season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Joss Whedon explains that the prosthetic fangs the actors wear make particular sounds difficult to pronounce properly. The makeup artists and the actors learned a few tricks to get around this; custom prosthetics for major characters eased this problem. Whedon even invoked this trope in the first season Buffy DVD commentary by apologizing to one of his guest-stars for making him use the phrase "excruciating loser" in full vamp-face. Juliette Landau wore her fangs for an extended period before taking up the role of Drusilla specifically to learn how to speak properly with them. Unfortunately, guest vamps lacked the time for this, and some had more trouble than others.
  • In Chinese Paladin 3, the temporarily-vampirized hero has a huge problem with this. Not only does he struggle obviously and markedly with pronunciation, he often sprays innocent bystanders with spit in the process.
  • The Cat in Red Dwarf suffers a little bit of this from time to time.
  • Many of the Klingons and Ferengi in Star Trek's various series, particularly since they typically had entire mouths full of awkward prosthetic teeth. Particularly noticeable when recurring actors had to wear the makeup — such as in the Deep Space Nine episode "Apocalypse Rising", in which Odo, Sisko, and O'Brien go undercover as Klingons. O'Brien even points it out. Michael Dorn (who played Worf, a Klingon, for at least 13 years) found their plight rather amusing.
  • Supernatural: Spoofed in "LARP and the Real Girl" when a LARPer dressed as an orc has his false fangs fall out in the middle of a slurred Badass Boast. As he's held in the stocks, someone else has to put them back in for him.
  • The werewolves and other fanged supernatural beings in Teen Wolf. Most noticeable with Peter and Decualion, since their fangs are larger than normal.
  • Not so much in True Blood (although it does happen) but in the parody video of the show.
  • Juliet Van Heusen from Wizards of Waverly Place has a slight lisp once her fangs grow.

    Theatre 
  • Tanz der Vampire: Averted. Vampire actors are fitted with prosthetic fangs, but receive training to speak and sing clearly.

    Video Gameth 

    Webcomicth 
  • Bloody Urban:
    • When the vampire Camille was applying for Australian citizenship, she only passed the dictation testnote  by mind-controlling the proctor.
    • Shannon's fragile little sister, also named Camille, has crooked, front-facing fangs which result in a speech impediment.
  • DNA: Similar to the example from Homestuck below, members of Species X have mouths full of sharp teeth but only one of them, named Orion, talks like this, and he gets picked on for it. His teeth stick out noticeably more than the rest of the Xs.
  • The Jagermonsters in Girl Genius show enormous fangs when they speak or smile, some even have tusks, but for reasons somewhere between plot development and Rule of Funny, they speak with Funetik Aksent — cod-German or East European, in their case. The harshness of the accent could be put down to the fangs, but the handful of Jagers without these dental excesses talk the same way, so it seems to be cultural.
  • All of the Trolls in Homestuck have fangs, but Sollux is the only one that has been stated to have a lisp. This is because Sollux is also the only one with doubled incisors (and it is only the incisors, and their counterparts in the lower jaw, that are doubled). Which is why it vanishes when Karkat accidentally knocks those extra fangs out. For extra irony the only troll to turn into a "Rainbow Drinker" is the one who carefully enunciates words, pre and post transformation.
    TA: lips, lips, lipsssss. w0w, it feels s0 great t0 say that w0rd!
  • Out-of-Placers: Inverted with yinglets, who can't use interdentals due to their single large shell-tooth in front and use "z" instead of "th". This is a conscious choice, as seen when former human turned yinglet Kass first tries to speak with her new teeth.
    "Zis is za worst."
  • Skin the snake from Peter & Company (1998) and Peter & Company (2005) talks with a prominent hissing lisp, routinely pronouncing all his "s's" as "th's."
  • In Wapthi Thquare — uh, Wapsi Square, Monica ekthperientheth a temporary(?) bout of this as a result of her Jaguar Girl identity coming to the fore in the Bibliothiki.
  • In The Way of the Metagamer, Trope-tan lisps occasionally due to her Cute Little Fang.
  • Iacar from Wurr haf a diftinctive lifp.

    Web Videoth 

    Wethtern Animation 
  • Phineas and Ferb: Phineas gets this when he dresses as a vampire for Halloween.
  • A Pup Named Scooby-Doo mixes this with Vampire Vords when an actor who plays a vampire claims that the fake fangs he wears makes him speak in an accent when asked why he doesn't have an accent off-screen.
  • Shelly Marsh from South Park speaks like this because of her braces and retainer.
  • Sylvester the Cat and Tweety Bird: As a stretch for "fang", Sylvester the Cat has a lisp, to the point that his Catchphrase is read as "Thuffering Thuckatash!". Fittingly, in the "Fangs for the Memories" episode of The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries, Sylvester becomes a vampire, and retains the lisp.
  • Total Drama: Beth has these in season one because of her braces. She loses it in the second season and onwards due to them being removed.

    Real Lithe 
  • Any vampire LARPG player who's just gotten a new set of fake fangs tends to lisp slightly until they get used to the elongated canines.

Alternative Title(s): Whedon Thyndrome, Whedons Syndrome, Buffy Thpeak, Fang Speak, Fang Shpeak, Fang Induthed Lithp, Fang Induced Lisp, The Vampireth Dilemma, Fang Thspeak

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