Humor: Its Theory and Technique, with Examples and Samples; a Book of Discovery, Volumen10Dodd, Mead, 1935 - 268 páginas |
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Página 2
... laughter . The men are said to laugh because the story is funny , and the story is known to be funny because the men laugh at it . The man who tells the story is called a story teller . He is said to have a sense of humor . And the man ...
... laughter . The men are said to laugh because the story is funny , and the story is known to be funny because the men laugh at it . The man who tells the story is called a story teller . He is said to have a sense of humor . And the man ...
Página 7
... laughter . In reality it is only an accidental and physical concomitant . Laughter is the mere beginning of humor , both in time and in significance . The end , the final reach , is nearer to tears . All human origins go back into the ...
... laughter . In reality it is only an accidental and physical concomitant . Laughter is the mere beginning of humor , both in time and in significance . The end , the final reach , is nearer to tears . All human origins go back into the ...
Página 125
... laughter brim with tears . The highest point of Dickens's art is reached when he presents to us a crook like Alfred Jingle , and makes him almost lovable , a villain like Squeers and extracts amuse- ment from him , a horror like Mrs ...
... laughter brim with tears . The highest point of Dickens's art is reached when he presents to us a crook like Alfred Jingle , and makes him almost lovable , a villain like Squeers and extracts amuse- ment from him , a horror like Mrs ...
Contenido
CHAPTER | 1 |
FUN WITH WORDS | 16 |
PARODY BURLESQUE AND MISTRANSLATION | 42 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 5 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Humor: Its Theory and Technique, with Examples and Samples; a ..., Volumen10 Stephen Leacock Vista de fragmentos - 1935 |
Términos y frases comunes
A. P. Herbert American amusing Aristophanes Artemus Artemus Ward bad spelling Birdikin Buffalo Burke and Hare called century character Charles Dickens cheese Christmas comic verse Conan Doyle contrast course Dickens and Mark Dionysus E. V. Knox effect England English example eyes face Falstaff funny story gentleman girls half heard horse humorist incongruity Irish James McIntyre jezail John Bull joke killed language laugh laughter literature lived look Mark Twain Marshalsea McGill meaning meiosis morning moving picture narrator never once P. P. Bliss parasitic parody passed Pickwick Pickwick Papers poem poetry primitive Punch queer readers remember round satire seems Sherlock Holmes sound stand story teller super-comic poet talk tears technique of humor tell thing thought tion turn Valera verbal Watson wife women words writing