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We've all heard it before... literally. Some people know each other so well, they finish each other's sentences. The effect is usually a demonstration of how close the two people are-- they're so familiar with one another, they even think alike.
Generally comes in two forms-- the single line and the complex dialogue. The single line goes something like,
Bob: Where are my damn-- |
The complex dialogue is more elaborate:
Bob: Where are my damn-- |
Closeness and familiarity aren't the only reason for this trope. Others include:
Alice: This looks like a job for-- |
- Mocking someone for their clichéd ideas:
Alice: Superman will-- |
- Last-Second Word Swap (especially when the audience was expecting it to rhyme):
Alice: That sexy young farmer has an enormous-- |
- Making a quick gag by having the finished sentence be nothing at all like what the first person was going to say.
Alice: Maybe we should-- |
- Showing that two people who don't know each other are thinking the same thing.
Alice: Maybe we should-- |
- And more!
This trait is often found in Creepy Twins, Single-Minded Twins, and Sickeningly Sweethearts, but hardly restricted to them-- lovers, parents, siblings, friends, co-workers, enemies, even strangers can do this. And while we're at it, it doesn't have to be only two-- loads of people can get in on the act, although it might start to stretch credibility. Also present as a way of showing that two characters are telepathic or are parts of a Hive Mind.
If the characters are built around this trope, it's a sign of a big problem when they don't finish each other's sentences. If one character is a psychic, expect the other to shout something like, "Get out of my head!" Or even if they aren't psychic, if it happens often enough.
A similar effect is having characters Finish Dialogue in Unison. Two Scenes, One Dialogue and Distant Duet have characters finishing each other's sentences without even being in the same scene. Compare Strange Minds Think Alike, Catchphrase Interruptus.
Anime and Manga[]
- The twins Hikaru and Kaoru in Ouran High School Host Club do this sometimes. In Haruhi's Alice in Wonderland dream, they played the Cheshire Cat and appeared alternatingly from different sides, finishing each other's sentences as they talked to Haruhi.
- Happens in the finale of Stellvia of the Universe between Richard James and Carl Hutter when the two are having a few drinks on a desolate space station deck. James raises a toast, starting with "To the future...", and Hutter completes the sentence instantly, in the same tone: "...of humanity!" This is especially poignant, considering how Hutter is a shape-shifting Starfish Alien in disguise... and James knows it.
- While not the most typical example of twins, in Cardcaptor Sakura, Yue and Cerberus pick a climactic moment during the final judgment to suddenly start finishing each other's sentences--with multiple clauses, no less. In fact, despite their apparent hostility toward each other at the time, it becomes nearly impossible to distinguish exactly who is speaking at some points.
- Gunslinger Girl. Cyborg technician Louis Duvalier has beautiful twin assistants who do this. They even move in unison.
- Koizumi and Otani from Lovely Complex are so (unintentionally) good at this that they (again, unintentionally) become a comedy sensation at their school.
- The twin maids Honami and Minaho from Detective Conan deliberately did this to invoke a Creepy Twins effect.
Comics[]
- In the Scott Pilgrim books, Ken and Kyle Katayanagi often finish each other's sentences with their reasoning behind it being that they would always work together after Ramona cheated on them behind their backs. This was obviously not in the movie as the only line the Twins have in the film is "Hah!" during a fight sequence.
Fanfic[]
- The Weasley Twins, from Harry Potter are not an example, even though they are popularly portrayed that way in Fan Fiction. They don't complete each other's sentences in the books; rather, one will follow the other with the next appropriate sentence - they do not share a single mind, but simply think very much alike.
- The ideal is Lampshaded in Harry Potter and The Methods of Rationality, which features a sections focusing on the Twins, and indicating something magical is at work. They don't actually share one mind, but come to the same conclusions when they have the same information. When one of them thinks differently than the other, they both feel uncomfortable until they share what they know and snap back.
Film--Animation[]
- The Fates from Disney's Hercules do this, most noticeably in their introduction, when they're giving Hades the prophecy.
- Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee in Disney's Alice in Wonderland (but not in the original book).
Film--Live Action[]
- From Scary Movie 4:
Cindy Campbell: It looks like we have a lot in... |
- The twins from Snatch do this.
- In Stuart Little, Mr. and Mrs. Little do this so frequently that they panic when they don't. Stuart cutely lampshades this as he hears his future adoptive parents do this for the first time.
- From Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid:
Field Marshal Von Kluck: We were able to dupe Dr. Forrest by posing as a humanitary organization, who planned to wipe out hunger, by ageing cheese faster. |
Literature[]
- Robert A. Heinlein's Lapis Lazuli Long and Lorelei Lee Long are clone sisters who do this. They first appear in his novel Time Enough for Love and show up in his later novels.
- There is a James Thurber short story about this, called "The Curb in the Sky," where the trope has harrowing consequences.
- Harry and Hermione do this sometimes in Harry Potter, such as in Deathly Hallows when they discover what happened to Gryffindor's sword.
- In Fanon, Single-Minded Twins Fred and George Weasley are often written as doing this. In the books it only happened a couple of times and was more like collaborative interrupting. The movies were much more guilty of playing this trope straight with them.
- The twins Beltira and Belkira from the Belgariad and prequels.
- This was one of the traits that gave MASH's 'Radar' O'Reilly his nickname, and one of the parts of the book faithfully translated into the subsequent film and television series.
- Dragons and their riders in The Inheritance Cycle, notably Oromis and Glaedr in Eldest and Eragon and Saphira in Brisingr.
- A variant in the Starcraft novel Liberty's Crusade. Kerrigan, being a telepath, tends to finish other people's sentences out of habit, which annoys just about everyone else. When she's leaving for her totally-not-a-date with Raynor after the Antiga mission, Liberty's last bit of advice is "remember to let him finish his damn sentences".
- In The Hunger Games, Wiress tends to trail off or just stop speaking abruptly in the middle of her sentences, at which point Beetee finishes them.
- In Spindle's End by Robin McKinley, Rosie and her best friend Peony take this one step further.
You finish each other's sentences half the time — or sometimes, if you think no one else is listening, you don't bother to finish them because you both know what you were going to say. |
- Lampshaded in Artemis Fowl and the Opal Deception. Mervall and Descant are twins, which are very rare among fairies.
"We're thinking of writing a book, aren't we, Merv? All about how we..." |
- Reynolds and Claude's promotion interview in the penultimate chapter of The Pale King. Chris incredulously wonders how long they had to practice it.
Live Action TV[]
- Played with in (something like) this exchange in Community:
Abed: I hope they're not twins. Twins freak me out. They always know what the other one is... |
- Spin City got meta:
Carter: Mike, you and Caitlin are in danger of becoming one of those couples that claim you're apart, but in reality you're... |
- A Monty Python's Flying Circus sketch had a housewife receive a visit from a doorman who helped her finish sentences by first finishing them for her, then starting them so that she'd have to finish them.
- Another Python sketch had an interview show with the host interviewing three men: one who only said the beginnnings of words, one who said the middles, and one who said the ends. After each said their own version of "Good evening," he had them all say "Good evening" together.
First man: G-- |
- Similar to the Community example, Arrested Development had this exchange:
Michael: It's like we finish each others'- |
- In Broken News, the newscasters for PVS News routinely complete each others' sentences, or even words.
- Lampshaded by Brian in a season five episode of Queer as Folk after Justin has told him to stop being cynical:
Brian: "I'm not being cynical, I'm being-" |
- Sheridan and Delenn in Babylon 5 do this a little.
- Attempted in They Think It's All Over:
Rory: Gary and I have been working together for so long that we can actually... |
- It happens so frequently on Castle between Castle and Beckett that fellow detectives overhearing their conversation had to Lampshade it:
Ryan: Do they know that they're finishing each other's sentences? |
- Another time, Ryan asks if they practice doing it when he and Esposito aren't around.
Lanie: It's so cute when you guys do that. |
- NCIS: Los Angeles has Nell annoying the hell out of everyone by doing this on her first episode. Characterization Marches On, though, and now she's just doing it to Eric. It's played for laughs, and incredibly cute. Other partners on the show tend to do this as well.
- All over the place on NCIS. McGee/Abby, any partners, any time the field agents brief Gibbs, any time Gibbs gives orders and the others anticipate him . . .
- Gem and Gemma from Power Rangers RPM do this habitually; they don't speak (or think) as individuals much if at all until Gemma gets a boyfriend. After that, while they show signs of not being a Hive Mind, but still do this frequently. Just not all the time.
- Kirk and Spock do this occasionally in Star Trek the Original Series.
- In Star Trek the Next Generation there is a whole race known as the Binars who talk this way because of their binary/pair based culture and biology.
- Noah's Arc: Subverted in the movie where Noah and Wade seem to start to give the same answers to relationship questions, but end with completely different ones. This is the first major sign they're have deeper relationship issues.
- A recurring sketch on The Two Ronnies featured Corbett's character trying to tell a story, and Barker's character attempting to finish his sentences and getting it wrong.
- On The West Wing, Will Bailey and Kate Harper do this in front of C.J., while trying to hide the fact that they're a couple. Both lampshade how bad they are at it.
- In the episode Sateda of Stargate Atlantis Teyla attempts to do this with Sheppard; however it takes her three guesses to figure out what he's saying, and at one point she offends him by saying he has no friends.
Sheppard: Look, Teyla... I'm not really good at, uh... actually, I'm... I'm terrible at expressing... I don't know what you'd call it, uh... |
- In the Doctor Who episode "The Almost People", the Doctor and a doppelganger of the Doctor do this.
Magazines[]
- In a TV Week interview, Hamish Blake and Andy Lee were talking about their close friendship.
Andy: "We-" |
Newspaper Comics[]
Dilbert: I think I should take... |
Stand-up Comedy[]
- This is a crucial part of the stand-up act of Randy and Jason Sklar, as they are identical twins with exactly the same voice who seem to run on the exact same wavelength at all times. They practically turn finishing each other's sentences into a zen artform.
Theatre[]
- One performance of Henry VI Part II has Suffolk dragged offstage and killed before delivering his last line, leaving it to be completed by the pirate captain, which adds a wonderful creepiness to the scene.
Suffolk: Great men oft die by vile bezonians: |
- Speaking of Shakespeare's Henry plays, in Henry IV, Part I, Prince Hal finishes Hotspur's dying speech for him:
Hotspur: ...O, I could Prophesie, |
- Rent: "Light My Candle":
Roger: Oh, the wax. It's-- |
- In The Serpent, a dark version of the Adam and Eve story the Serpent manages to do this to itself every time it speaks. The Serpents' lines often also overlap words and start before the previous line finishes.
Serpent 3: You might |
- The chorus women also do this, though without the overlap.
First WC: Old stories have a secret; |
- In The Gondoliers by Gilbert and Sullivan, when Marco and Giuseppe agree to jointly become the King of Barataria, they announce this in a verse where each of them sings only every other bar. It works like this, with Marco's part in plain text and Giuseppe's in boldface:
Replying, we sing |
Video Games[]
- Final Fantasy VIII has one between Quistis and Squall in the beginning of the game. Rinoa joins in once she gets to know Squall well enough.
- Liza and Tate from Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire.
- Alphamon and Omegamon in Digimon World Dawn Dusk, a non-romantic or sibling variant which plays instead on their Theme Naming ("alpha and omega").
Webcomics[]
- This comic from Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal. It gets worse very quickly.
- Tina of Wapsi Square does this to just about everyone, though she has been wrong at least twice. However, on both of those occasions, the question that was actually being asked was not one that she necessarily wanted to answer, so it may have been intentional. She also predicts the orders of everyone who comes to her coffee shop.
Web Original[]
- The Twins of Thermopylae from Girlchan in Paradise episode 3 do this, but end up subverting it:
Twin 1: Thank you...
|
- In Thatguywiththeglasses.com's 3rd year anniversary special Suburban Knights, the two groups, on a quest to find a hidden treasure, in seperate locations, invoke this trope.
Film Brain: Oh, you've... |
Western Animation[]
- Part of the creepy effect used by the three Weird Sisters in Gargoyles
- Twins Jim and Tim do this sometimes on Kim Possible.
- Twins Tessa and Vanessa on Pepper Ann.
- Happened in Family Guy when Judas and Pontius Pilate first met.
- The Simpsons: Agnes Skinner says this trope complementing her relationship with Comic Book Guy in "Worst Episode Ever" when they meet Homer and Marge.
- In a recent episode, Homer tries desperately to make a connection with the new security guard:
Wayne: I have to go to... |
Iggy and LemmyHip and Hop in the Mario cartoons.- Dash and Bash from Thomas the Tank Engine.
- The Interesting Twins From Beneath The Mountain in Codename: Kids Next Door.
- Happens with Bulkhead and Arcee in an episode of Transformers Prime, to Miko's disgust.