Formulae, Wordplay, Verses and More: Where Humor Research Meets Phraseology Cover Image

Formeln, Wortspiele, Verse und mehr: Wo Humorforschung Phraseologie trifft
Formulae, Wordplay, Verses and More: Where Humor Research Meets Phraseology

Author(s): Virginija Masiulionytė
Subject(s): Theoretical Linguistics, Comparative Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Social Informatics, ICT Information and Communications Technologies, Phraseology
Published by: Vilniaus Universiteto Leidykla
Keywords: phraseology; set phrases; humor; irony; parody; social media;

Summary/Abstract: This paper aims to examine the meeting points between phraseology and humor research, focusing on the role and the functions of fixed phrases in humor discourse. The examples to illustrate certain aspects of usage of fixed phrases for joke purposes are taken mainly from social media such as Facebook and Twitter and include jokes in English, German, Lithuanian, Russian, and Polish. In the course of the investigation, a distinction ought to be made between set phrases (idioms in the narrower sense of the term, proverbs, catch phrases etc.) and fixed phrases in general. Set phrases (phrasemes) have an “added value” regarding their meaning – be it a figurative element, be it ready-made reasoning or behavioral models in short form in the case of adages. In humor discourse idioms – and proverbs – are used mainly for wordplay, in which both the literal and the idiomatic meaning are activated. The wordplay can happen also in verse form. Adages can be transformed or twisted resulting in new parodistic or funny sayings. Fixed phrases outside of the phraseology can be separated into two groups: phrases typical for a particular discourse type and joke frame related phrases. The former, as means to evoke a certain frame, are used in parodistic jokes (e.g., the phrase ladies if he evokes the dating tips frame). The latter constitute a distinct class of fixed phrases which can be found only in the humor discourse: these phrases act as joke formulae und provide a basis for bigger or smaller joke categories.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 73
  • Page Range: 104-131
  • Page Count: 28
  • Language: German