Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What idioms are used to describe jokes?

What idioms are used to describe jokes?

Don't be unsmiling, talk with your mouth, whine and gag, laugh and say.

1. Never smile.

Pinyin: bù? gǒu? yán? Xilong

Short spell: bgyx

Explanation: If: If, whatever. No kidding. Describe a serious attitude.

Source: On the Book of Rites Quli: "Don't climb high, don't go deep, be meticulous, don't laugh."

Example: Let's start with this gentleman, Zheng, a single name, male, from Xiangtan, Hunan. He has been a lecturer in Song Studies. Liang Qing Liang Qichao's The Future of New China

Synonym: Sitting steady.

Antonym: glib, laughing.

Grammar: as predicate and attribute; Describe a solemn expression.

Match teeth

Pinyin: d m? yá? Pai? state in the Zhou Dynasty

Short spell: dypz

Interpretation: refers to mutual abuse, chatting and joking.

Source: Chapter 23 of Xiao Xiaosheng's "Jin Ping Mei Hua Thorn" in Ming Lanling: "(This woman) often fights with her followers and does whatever it takes."

Example:

Synonym: punch your teeth and shut up.

Antonym:

Grammar: as predicate and attribute; Used in spoken English

3. Haw, haw, haw

Pinyin: j:? jī? gā? snap

Short spell: jjgg

Explanation: Onomatopoeic words, describing laughter, etc.

Source:

Example: Please keep quiet and don't make any noise.

Synonym: creak

Antonym:

Grammar: as attribute and adverbial; Used for onomatopoeic words

English: Twitter

4. Laughing and sealing Hou

Pinyin: tán? xiào? fēng? moustache

Short spell: txfh

Explanation: Marquis is enclosed in jokes. In the past, it was easy to become famous.

Source: Tang Du Fu's poem "Remembering the Past": "Yan Lu listens to the lad and laughs at the question."

If you are proud of your strange bones, you must. Yuan Xinwenfang's Biography of Tang Cai Wei

Grammar: as predicate and attribute; It's easy to describe fame.

5. Laugh and laugh.

Pinyin: tán? xiào? zì? Ruo

Short spell: txzr

Explanation: poised: as usual. Refers to being able to treat what happened calmly, talking and laughing, and not changing the normal state.

Source: Biography of the Three Kingdoms Wu Shu Gan Ning: "All the people in the city are not afraid, but they would rather laugh than laugh." "The Biography of Kong Rong in the Later Han Dynasty": "After reading a few books, I laughed and laughed."

Although it was raining cats and dogs, we talked while walking, and the more we talked, the more interesting it became. Zou Taofen's Experience, Rebirth.

Synonym: Laughing and laughing, poised.

Antonym: caught off guard

Grammar: as predicate, attribute and adverbial; Refers to a natural attitude.