A LAFF CAN CURE MANY THINGS
A LAFF CAN CURE MANY THINGS
Some days we do tend to be a little more susceptible to a good hearty laff…..whether it is our sense of the absurd or just being plain funny…a crazy irony …a banality that just kills you…you can be in a conversation where someone is telling you (at least to them) a serious story and something in their words will strike you and no matter how hard you try you start to laff (it's good-spirited) but sometimes it takes the other person a moment or two to grasp the humor…and on occasion it is never perceivedthere are the too funny things that two can find utterly funny and you just laff your head off until your stomach muscles seem to almost cramp…..and air seems in short supply….there is truly a soul cleansing there…..and you are spreading good cheer and mirth…..there have been times where I fell to the floor…as the more I thought of the funny situation or phrase…you can not stop laffiing…and it is contagious …a very happy non-affliction…and the world is a brighter place when you have fun and have a hearty laff and even better when you can share it
- As the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of a fool —The Holy Bible/Ecclesiastes
- Basically when you laugh you have to make a fool of yourself … it’s like sex —Robin Williams, “Sixty Minutes” interview, September 21, 1986
- Chuckle … it sounded like a trapped wasp —Jonathan Gash
- Chuckles … empty and round, like bubbles —Dan Jacobson
- Chuckling like a jovial insurance salesman —James Crumley
- Contralto laughter, like a violin obligato under trills of a flute —Carlos Baker
- A dry crackle like leaves crushed underfoot —Louise Erdrich
- Dry laughter like the cackle of crows or the crackling of fallen leaves underfoot —Margaret Laurence
- Giggled … like a naughty child which has unintentionally succeeded in amusing the grown-ups —Christopher Isherwood
- (They kissed. And) giggled like cartoon mice —Tom Robbins
- Giggle, like a child watching a Hollywood adventure film —Nadine Gordimer
- A good laugh is sunshine in a house —William Makepeace Thackeray
- Heavy, melodious laughter, like silver coins shaking in a bag —Aharon Megged
- Her braying laugh rang out like the report of a shotgun —James Thurber
- Her laugh broke like a dish —Cynthia Ozick
- Her laugh crackled … like a leap of electricity —Richard Francis
- Her laugh pealed out like a raven escaping into the night —Donald McCaig
- Her laugh rang like the jangling of bracelets —Derek Walcott
- Her laughter hung in the air like sleigh bells on a winter night —Jay Parini
- Her laughter was a titanic, passionate thing that seemed to pass up like a wave from her toes to her mouth —Pat Conroy
- High laugh, like a dove cry —Eudora Welty
- A high laugh like a wicked witch —Carolyn Chute
- His laughter thickened like a droning bell —James Wright
- A hoarse, very small laugh, like a cat’s cough —Frank Swinnerton
- A horrifying derisive laugh, like rolling tin —Barry Hannah
- Laugh … as if a demon within him were exulting with gloating scorn —Iris Murdoch
- (Louisa’s) laugh begins high and descends from there like a cascade —Daphne Merkin
- Laughed, a little drugged giggle, like chatter —Paul Theroux
- Laughed contemptuously like a whore being offered too little money —Gary Hart
- Laughed, like a bowlful of jelly —Clement C. Moore
- Laughed like a windup machine —John D. MacDonald
- Laughed like monkeys —Richard Ford
- Laughed like murmurs of the sea —W. B. Yeats
- Laughed … like the trill of a hedge-warbler —Frank Swinnerton
- A laugh exploded out of me like a sneeze —Scott Spencer
- Laughing, a sound like wind in the grass —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- A laugh is just like sunshine —Anon rhyme The simile is the poem’s repeat motif.
- Laugh … like the barking of a fox —Erich Maria Remarque
- Laugh … like a bird’s carol on the sunrise breeze —John Greenleaf Whittier
- Laugh like a hyena —William Shakespeare This simile from As You Like It crops up in many a modern short story and novel.
- Laugh … like a spoon tinkling against a medicine glass —Katherine Mansfield
- Laugh … like a thrush singing —Oscar Wilde
- A laugh like clapboards being ripped off the side of a house —Peter De Vries
- Laughs [in a film] … come out of despair, like bits of green in a graveyard —Walter Goodman about the movie, No Surrender, New York Times, August 6, 1986
- Laughs like a rhinoceros —Tom Davies The person Davies described was Samuel Johnson.
- Laughs like little bells in light wind —George Garrett
- Laughter … checked by small clutches of muscle, like tiny fists, at the corners of his mouth —Leonard Michaels
- Laughter crackling like a schoolgirl who has not experienced enough of the world to fear it —Ira Wood
- Laughter cruel as barbed wire —George Garrett
- Laughter falls like rain or tears —Dame Edith Sitwell
- Laughter fell like a shower of coins —George Garrett
- Laughter … high and free and musical, like a happy soprano limbering up —Harvey Swados
- Laughter hung smoke-like in the sudden stillness —Ralph Ellison
- Laughter … keeps coming like a poison that must be ejected —Nora Johnson
- Laughter leaped suddenly from her throat … then stopped, like something flung away and lost —Graham Swift
- Laughter like hiccoughs —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Laughter, light and restrained like the clatter of rolling nuts —Yisrael Zarchi
- Laughter lonelier than tears —Anonymous blurb preceding a humorous quote, New York Times Book Review/Noted With Pleasure, September 14, 1986
- The laughter of a fool is like that of a horse —Welsh proverb See Also: FOOLISHNESS, STUPIDITY
- Laughter roared through the spectators like wind through trees —Gerald Kersh
- Laughter spilled out of his prodigious frame like gravel being unloaded from a dump truck —Pat Conroy
- A laugh that rippled … like the sound of a hidden brook —O. Henry
- A laugh that rumbles like a freight train in the night —Michael Goodwin about sports broadcaster, Steve Zabriskie, New York Times/TV Sports, October 2, 1986
- A laugh that unfolds like a head of lettuce —Antler
- Let out a cackle of a laugh, like the sound a hen might make if the hen were mad about something —Larry McMurtry
- Men who never laugh may have good hearts, but they are deep seated; like some springs, they have their inlet and outlet from below, and show no sparkling bubble on the brim —Josh Billings Words originally in Billings’ phonetic dialect are: ‘laff (laugh), ‘hav’ (have), ‘sum’ (some).
- A most pleasant laugh, bubbly and controlled, like fine champagne —Margaret Millar
- Peal of laughter like the ringing of silvery bells —Nathanial Hawthorne
- A queer stage laugh, like the cackle of a baffled villain in a melodrama —Edith Wharton
- (Boutin’s mouth opened from ear to ear in) a roar of laughter, like the bursting of a mortar —HonorĂ© de Balzac
- She laughed, sounding like a small barking dog —Robert Campbell
- She pursed her lips each time she laughed, making laughter seem a gesture of self-control —W. P. Kinsella
- A silvery laugh, like a brook running out to meet the river —Mike Fredman
- A slow ripple of laughter, like a scattering of autumn leaves —Robert Traver
- A snort of a chuckle like a bull-frog —Lawrence Durrell
- Some … laugh just as a rat does, who has caught a steel trap, with his tail —Josh Billings In the original phonetic dialect this is: “Laff just az a rat duz, who haz caught a steel trap with his tale.”
- The sound [of laughter] was like the whirring of an old grandfather clock before it strikes —Frank Swinnerton
- Stopped laughing as suddenly as if a set ring had been broken —Loren D. Estleman
- A sudden fizz of laughter like soda water —George Garrett
- Tittering like a small bird —Beryl Markham
- Twinkled like Old King Cole —Donald McCaig
- When he laughed, a satyr-like quality suffused his face —Nathaniel Benchley
- When she does laugh … it’s like polished crystal, like a stream in the Alps racing over a pebbly bed here below, like … like another simile —Hanoch Bartov For anyone interested in multiple similes … here’s the simile itself to round up a medley of comparisons.
- When she laughed it was as if a wren sang —Frank Swinnerton
- When she was about to laugh, her tone grew higher and melodious, easing into the laugh like a singer easing from recitative to an aria —Lynne Sharon Schwartz
- Wrinkles of laughter leaped into sight on his face, like small friendly insects running all over it —Romain Gary