填空题
No one knows exactly why we laugh or why anything that is
funny should cause us to make such a peculiar noise. It would be just as logical
to stick our thumbs in our ears and wiggle our fingers as it is to giggle or
bellow or howl with laughter. But when something strikes our "funny bone", our
diaphragm flutters up and down, and we laugh.
66.
______
Stories are among the most popular forms of humor. As a
rule, a story is considered inferior if it embarrassed someone, if it makes
something sacred appear common, if it makes a person's weakness the cause for
laughter, if it has to have vulgarity to be funny, or if everyone cannot join in
the enjoyment of the joke.
People enjoy very much the various
situations of humor.
If a man meets a lady on the street, tips
his hat to her, and a pigeon flies out from beneath it, most of the people who
see it would roar with laughter. This is called the humor of the unexpected
happening.
67. ______
Situation humor need not
be described in words. By far the greatest amount of humor is told rather than
seen. Certain words are funny in their very sounds, like "bobble" and "squirt".
Sometimes people get mixed up in pronouncing their words, and instead of saying
"people think" they might say "thinkle peep".
68.
______
Hyperbole is simply exaggeration. Sometimes it includes a
twisting or distortion of the truth for the sake of humor. Common expressions of
everyday life are often hyperboles. If a woman says "It's raining cats and dogs"
she is using hyperbole. And if she is answered with "I know, I just stepped in a
poodle", she hears a pun.
69. ______
A man's car
stuck in the mud one rainy day. He walked to the nearest farmhouse to telephone
for help. The farmer had no telephones but said the farm down the road had one.
Muttering angrily, the man plodded on through the rain. The second farmer's
telephone was out of order, but this farmer said another farm still farther down
the road had one. The motorist was near the exploding point when he reached the
third farm. As the farmer shuffled to the door, the motorist yelled, "You idiot!
I wouldn't use your phone even if you had one!"
Humor of words
takes many forms. It can be gentle and kindly, or it can be harsh and biting.
There is no exact distinction between these various types of humor.
Wit differs from most humor in being purely intellectual, rather than
relying on incongruities that come up naturally. Most humor produces a smile,
but wit usually causes people to break out in sudden laughter.
Satire presents the weaknesses of humanity and makes fun of them. Usually,
satire attempts to cure the foolishness by making people laugh at it.
70. ______
Parody and burlesque change the wording of a
well-known story or song to produce comic results.
A. Puns, or double
meanings, furnish us with much of our humor. Puns are plays on words, in which
one word is said when another one is meant.
B. Irony implies the opposite of
what is apparently being stated. Irony may begin as a compliment or a simple
statement, but it conceals a sting in the remark. It is usually expressed by a
tone of voice, and is often an understatement.
C. Comparison and contrast
often give rise to humor. They are almost the same as the incongruous
situation.
D. The urge to laugh appears very early. Babies smile, then coo,
and finally chuckle when pleased. If certain parts of the baby's body are
tickled with the fingers, laughter occurs. But by the time children attend
school, they also laugh at things they hear and see.
E. Another kind of
situation humor is the incongruous (putting together unrelated things). Boys and
girls see dogs every day and think nothing of them. But if a dog enters a
classroom, everyone laughs. The dog does not belong there, and situation is
incongruous.
F. Repetition is also a popular way of gaining laughter, but it
does not produce a very high grade of humor. In many of the jokes told, a thing
happens twice in exactly the same way. But the third time it happens
differently, and the point of the story is revealed.