Speech balloon

Speech balloons (also speech bubbles, dialogue balloons or word balloons) are a graphic convention used most commonly in comic books, comics and cartoons to allow words (and much less often, pictures) to be understood as representing the speech or thoughts of a given character in the comic. There is often a formal distinction between the balloon that indicates thoughts and the one that indicates words spoken aloud: the balloon that conveys subjective thoughts is often referred to as a thought bubble.

History

One of the earliest antecedents to the modern speech bubble were the "speech scrolls," wispy lines that connected first person speech to the mouths of the speakers in Mesoamerican art between 600 and 900 AD.

In Western graphic art, labels that reveal what a pictured figure is saying have appeared since at least the 13th century. These were in common European use by the early 16th century. Word balloons (also known as "banderoles") began appearing in 18th-century printed broadsides, and political cartoons from the American Revolution (including some published by Benjamin Franklin) often used them. With the development of the comics industry in the 20th century, the appearance of speech balloons has become increasingly standardized, though the formal conventions that have evolved in different cultures (USA as opposed to Japan, for example), can be quite distinct.

Podcasts:

PLAYLIST TIME:

Latest News for: word balloon

Do you fear a 'Trump Slump'? We reveal how to diversify an Isa away from ...

The Daily Mail 31 Mar 2025
'Some investors have steadily become ever more exposed to US equities in recent times and, along with this, the extreme concentration that had played out as the Mag-7 valuations ballooned.'.

Hailee Steinfeld joins Josh Allen’s family celebration, posing for a rare photo at his nephew’s birthday party

The Times of India 23 Mar 2025
Allen’s sister, Nicala Madden, and her husband, Brayden Madden, hosted the backyard party, which was filled with balloons, laughter, and sweet moments captured on social media.Nicala shared heartfelt ...

Piper, no! Parker Posey’s viral White Lotus accent is a gift to us all

The Observer 18 Mar 2025
We now live in a world where the word “understand” has become the four-syllable behemoth “understayund”, where “normal” is now pronounced “norramhul” and where “don’t” has ballooned into the two-word phrase “doh went”.

An Inhabitable Archive

The Harvard Crimson 14 Mar 2025
But this Wall is only temporary ... Back in the tunnel, a mastodon, Eliot’s beloved mascot, clutches a red balloon beside the words, “sometimes all you can do is let go.” I pause, running my fingers over the paint ... The mastodon still clutches its balloon.

DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Keir Starmer's pledge to wage war on the Blob | Daily Mail Online

The Daily Mail 14 Mar 2025
Make a bonfire of the quangos, slash NHS bureaucracy, bring the ballooning welfare bill under control, make our underperforming civil service leaner and more productive. They could have been the words ...
  • 1
×