Puns: What’s the UK’s funniest business name?

London: If you’re partial to a bag of chips, the chances are you’ve visited a chip shop with a pun-based name.

From London’s relatively straight-forward The Codfather to the more elaborately-named A Fish Called Rhondda in Pentre, Rhondda Cynon Taf, chip shop owners can’t resist a play on words.

Others in on the act include London barbers Barber Streisand, Sunderland wine shop Amy’s Winehouse and pottery cafe Kilning Me Softly in Milton Keynes.

Florist Rachael Allen owns the flamboyantly-named Dark Side of the Bloom just outside Bangor in Gwynedd, north Wales.

She said naming her business after the Pink Floyd song Dark Side of the Moon turned out to be a shrewd business decision.

“It just took off, we get so many comments, it’s unbelievable,” she said.

“I wanted something that reflected a little bit of an alternative florist rather than just the run of the mill because we do a lot of alternative weddings.

“The dark side represented the black and the funeral work and the bloom was obviously flowers.”

Although she would not consider herself to be a Pink Floyd fan, the name seems to attract people who are.

“I do get a lot of bikers and I’ve done a lot of bikers’ funerals and weddings as well and I think [the name] has attracted them so its really good,” she said.

Rachel’s business has been shortlisted for a competition aiming to find the shop name with the best – or worst, depending on your preference – use of a pun.

A list of what will be to some hilarious and to others groan-inducing names has been put together by language learning platform Babbel, which has analysed TikTok, Instagram, X (formerly known as Twitter), and Facebook to find the 120 most popular.

A public poll will decide an overall winner who will be named in the new year.

“The shop at the time was next door to the castle and the building that the shop was in used to be an armoury so we wanted it to be something to do with women and castles,” she explained.

But she does not attribute the success of her shop in Harlech, Gwynedd, to the memorable name.

“It’s fun to have a fun name… but I’m not sure it makes a difference to our business other than that the staff and locals find it fun,” she said.

In fact, she has changed the name of the business’ Facebook page to Wool & Gifts Harlech after finding people searching online were more likely to use the location of the shop than the name.

“The pun undeniably holds a special place in British hearts,” said Babbel’s linguistic and cultural expert Noel Wolf.

“The beauty of a pun lies in its ability to exploit the versatile vocabulary and multiplicity of meanings of English – the prevalence of the pun in Britain is testament to the flexibility and richness of the English language.”