笑话大全网 - 笑话段子 - 哪位能够提供有关"冷笑话"的英语文章(有追加分)

哪位能够提供有关"冷笑话"的英语文章(有追加分)

我已删了并修改了一些,不过英文能力有限所以不太会删。

记得加分哦,我花了很多时间的!!谢谢哦

Anti-humor is a kind of humor based on the surprise factor of absence of an expected joke.

Example:"Why did the chicken cross the road?"

Answer: "To get to the other side."

Anti-humor is a type of indirect humour that involves the joke-teller delivering something which is deliberately not funny, or lacking in intrinsic meaning.

Examples

"What do you get when you cross a muffin with chocolate chips?".

"The no soap radio joke"

Another form of anti-joke is commonly called a shaggy dog story after the joke which exemplifies it. It involves telling an extremely long joke with an intricate back story and surreal or plotline, but ending the story with either a weak pun, or abruptly stopping with no punchline at all.

'Dead body'/'Dead Baby' Jokes

Some anti-jokes are humorous because they involve unexpectedly blunt and graphic punchlines which often referencing death, infacticide and terminal illness.

Examples

"What did the little boy with no arms or legs get for Christmas?"

"

The anti-jokes relies on using widely known jokes which the audience is likely to have heard before. Instead of ending the joke in the usual humorous way, a mundane substitute is used, resulting in an anticlimax.

Some jokes derive humour from wordplay and puns. They are subverted through substituting the pun with an equivalent phrase with no such linguistic device, creating a cognitive dissonance with the superficial resemblance to the original.

"When it is half-open."

"He's a really charismatic person."

Other jokes rely on parts of a joke told in the wrong order or parts of different jokes told together, creating an effect similar to non-sequitur.

Question:"What did the little boy with no arms or legs get for Christmas?"

Answer:"Cancer."

'anti-humour', a new genre of humour gaining cult status in both the UK and US. Purposely countering comedy tradition, many say it is overtaking observational humour to become the new ‘alternative comedy.'

The mundane ending relies on introducing an unexpectedly commonplace ending.

Q:What is the difference between a boy and a girl?

A:The boy is eight times more likely to be convicted of murder.

Or in the unanticipated use of technical or circumlocutional language as in the popular ‘Johnny big head' joke below,

Johnny comes back from school crying and says, "Mommy all the kids in the school say I have a big head."

His mother replies, "No you don't Johnny. You have a hideously deformed head. The other children are merely hiding the truth to protect your feelings."

A shaggy dog story is an elongated and involved joke with a feeble or nonexistent ending. Its humour relies on its anti-climactic punch line. Take a look at this example ( /jokes.php?section=shaggy&name=shaggydog )

Although there is no doubt that there has been a recent upsurge in the popularity of 'anti-humour', it could be argued that the origins of the genre have been around since modern comedy began. Probably one of the oldest jokes on the comedy circuit is ‘The Aristocrats'. Based on a short story involving a travelling family

(passes all the above categories of 'anti-humour' and is considered a kind of ‘secret handshake' amongst many comedians. So popular is it in fact, that in 2005 a documentary film was based on it, featuring comedians such as Whoopi Goldberg, Billy Connelly and Eric Idle. Nevertheless, it's recognition only recently is another example of the popularity anti-humour has gained of late.

Anti-humour is unashamedly a rebellion against the classic joke. By subverting the traditional ending and/or increasing it's shock value, it turns the classic joke on its head, mocking it with it‘s own format.