An expression of happiness, oft used after a difficult task has been completed. A word used to show you condolences. A catchy phrase to accompany your clever pranks. A phrase used to express sarcasm or jokes. Also a phrase commonly used in Big Bang Theory show by character Sheldon. A catchy phrase to accompany your clever pranks. I just replaced your toothpaste with denture cream.
A word used to show you condolences. My parents are getting divorced Bazinga! A word used instead of saying:"fooled you! It first appeared in the series of " The Big Bang Theory " and is used by the character named Sheldon. On January 4th, , Warner Bros , the company behind the making of The Big Bang Theory, filed for a registered trademark for the catchphrase, becoming effective on April 24th, S02E23 " The Monopolar Expedition ".
Sheldon: You actually had it right in the first place. Once again, you've fallen for one of my classic pranks. Sheldon: Leonard, you may be right. It appears that Penny secretly wants you in her life in a very intimate and carnal fashion. Sheldon: Of course not.
Sheldon: Not to worry. I hid it. You're in my spot. S03E03 " The Gothowitz Deviation ". Sheldon: There's just no pleasing you, is there, Leonard? You weren't happy with my previous approach to dealing with her, so I decided to employ operant conditioning techniques, building on the work of Thorndike and B. By this time next week, I believe I can have her jumping out of a pool, balancing a beach ball on her nose.
Sheldon: I'm not suggesting we really make her jump out of a pool. Sheldon: Obviously, waitressing at the Cheesecake Factory is a complex socioeconomic activity, that requires a great deal of analysis and planning.
Sheldon: Bazinga! You've fallen victim to another one of my classic practical jokes. I'm your boss now. You may want to laugh at that. S03E10 " The Gorilla Experiment ".
S03E14 " The Einstein Approximation ". Sheldon: Bobs head out of ball pit Bazinga. Bobs head out of ball pit Bazinga. S03E18 " The Pants Alternative ". Sheldon: All right, you people ready to have some fun?
You have a basic understanding of differential calculus and at least one year of algebraic topology? Well, then here come the jokes. Why did the chicken cross the Mobius strip? To get to the same side. All right, a neutron walks into a bar and asks, how much for a drink? The bartender says, for you, no charge. S03E20 " The Spaghetti Catalyst ".
S03E21 " The Plimpton Stimulation ". S03E23 " The Lunar Excitation ". This scares Leonard, causing him to swerve and almost crash until he can regain control of the car. S04E05 " The Desperation Emanation ". Amy : You wanted me to have a boyfriend, Mother. For instance, Sheldon's distinctive door knock and the accompanying "Penny.
Amazingly enough, Sheldon did not actually use the term "bazinga" sometimes spelled "buzzinga" in the closed captioning for the show , which he uses to denote that whatever he said before it was meant to be a joke, until the season finale of the second season of the series! It has become wildly popular ever since. The origins of the term, though, are interesting in their own right.
How did it work its way into the show? Did the show actually create the term which it has been often credited as doing? Read on to find out! The term first showed up in the writers room at The Big Bang Theory. It was the catch phrase of writer Stephen Engel, who would use it whenever he played a prank on a fellow writer. The Big Bang Theory co-creator Bill Prady recalled a time that Engel gave him a grapefruit but when Prady went to eat it, it turned out to be hollowed out and carefully put back together.
Engel then said, "Bazinga! In the opening of the season 2 finale, "The Monopolar Expedition," Leonard Johnny Galecki is working on a problem on the whiteboard when Sheldon Jim Parsons tells him that he has made a mistake.
Leonard looks for the mistake but can't find it.
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