Funny Jokes For Adults

admin, 05 September 2010, Comments Off
Categories: Funny Jokes For Adults
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NOTES: The claim that the English originated humor was made by Sir William Temple (an Englishman). Sir William, diplomat, essayist, married to Dorothy Osborne, made his point about humor in 1690 and nobody has yet disproved Sir William’s claim.
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His View was that England’s humor was the product of richness of the soil, the inequality of our climate, and liberty. Liberty, because much humor came from the perception of odd and incongruous ways in which some people behaved, and despotic government as practiced over much of Europe resulted in – uniformity of character and all cut from only two patterns, the gentry and the common people. Humorous behavior, Sir William argued, needed a free society in which to flourish, and the Anglo-Saxons in England’s temperate climate developed a kind of stubborn individuality which was peculiarly suited to humor. We have more humor because every man follows his own, and takes a pleasure, perhaps a pride, in showing it.
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A telling point which Sir William made about the Englishmen of humor was that no other nation had the word humor in its language. The French had their equivalents of ‘comedy’ and ‘wit’ and ‘buffoonery’ but their word humeur meant ‘disposition’ or ‘mood’. The Germans, the Italians, the French, all enjoyed upper class wit and proletariat clowning but only the English, it seems, took pleasure in the middle area, in the recording of ‘small but significant human traits’. Wit was concerned with ideas and buffoonery with deeds, humor with people.
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The other nations of Europe not only failed to develop an equivalent to the English sense of humor but could not understand it. Visitors were dismayed by the strange, alien flippancy which they encountered in English conversation and literature, by the English nation’s affection for the oddities of human behavior.
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Regards – David Lloyd

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