Jose Carillo's Forum

LANGUAGE HUMOR AT ITS FINEST

Making yourself more proficient in English need not be a drag. You can actually speed up the learning process and make it fun by generously lacing it with humor—but preferably the best that the English language can offer.

In this new section, apart from giving a fixed slot to our weekly “In a Lighter Vein” pop-out humor piece in the Forum homepage, we have put together the finest of those weekly humor pop-ups since the Forum started. The best of them—collected from various sources on the web and sent in by friends—are all here, posted in the Forum under the following headings: Wordplay, On the Job, Student and School Life, and Miscellany.

So if you missed any of the best of the Forum’s weekly humor pop-ups, you can enjoy and savor them again and again here—and better still, share them with your friends!

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25 Lighthearted Denunciations Against the English Language
Collected by Theresa Dold

“Our language is funny – a ‘fat chance’ and a ‘slim chance’ are the same thing.”
J. Gustav White

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“Drawing on my fine command of the English language, I said nothing.”
Robert Benchley

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“If the English language made any sense, lackadaisical would have something to do with a shortage of flowers.”
Doug Larson

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“I like the word ‘indolence.’ It makes my laziness seem classy.”
Bern Williams

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“Never make fun of someone who speaks broken English. It means they know another language.”
H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

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“When I read some of the rules for speaking and writing the English language correctly, I think any fool can make a rule, and every fool will mind it.”
Henry David Thoreau

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“I speak two languages: Body and English.”
Mae West

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“If the English language made any sense, a catastrophe would be an apostrophe with fur.”
Doug Larson

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“Why do we have noses that run and feet that smell?”
Author Unknown

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“English is a funny language; that explains why we park our car on the driveway and drive our car on the parkway.”
Author Unknown

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“The word ‘good’ has many meanings.  For example, if a man were to shoot his grandmother at a range of five hundred yards, I should call him a good shot, but not necessarily a good man.”
G. K. Chesterton

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“Lymph, v.:  to walk with a lisp.”
Washington Post reader

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“The two most beautiful words in the English language are ‘check enclosed.’”
Dorothy Parker

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“The quantity of consonants in the English language is constant. If omitted in one place, they turn up in another. When a Bostonian ‘pahks’ his ‘cah,’ the lost ‘r’s migrate southwest, causing a Texan to ‘warsh’ his car and invest in ‘erl wells.’”
Author Unknown

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“‘I am’ is reportedly the shortest sentence in the English language. Could it be that ‘I do’ is the longest sentence?”
George Carlin

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“Rudyard Kipling was fired as a reporter for the San Francisco Examiner. His dismissal letter was reported to have said, ‘I’m sorry, Mr. Kipling, but you just don’t know how to use the English language. This isn’t a kindergarten for amateur writers.’”
Author Unknown

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“The English language has a deceptive air of simplicity; so have some little frocks; but they are both not the kind of thing you can run up in half an hour with a machine.”
Dorothy L. Sayers

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“What is the shortest word in the English language that contains the letters: abcdef? Answer: feedback. Don’t forget that feedback is one of the essential elements of good communication.”
Author Unknown

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“English grammar is so complex and confusing for the one very simple reason that its rules and terminology are based on Latin, a language with which it has precious little in common.”
Bill Bryson

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“Making English grammar conform to Latin rules is like asking people to play baseball using the rules of football.”
Bill Bryson

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“The nine most terrifying words in the English language are, ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help.’”
Ronald Reagan

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“In my sentences I go where no man has gone before… I am a boon to the English language.”
George W. Bush

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“Introducing ‘Lite’ – The new way to spell ‘Light’, but with twenty percent fewer letters.”
Jerry Seinfeld

“England and America are two countries separated by a common language.”
George Bernard Shaw

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“Opera in English is, in the main, just about as sensible as baseball in Italian.”
H. L. Mencken

From the collection of Theresa Dold in voxy.com

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