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What do you call the main part of a joke?
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If I start a joke with a question, then answer it as part of a joke. What is the answer of the joke called? Is there a specific term for it? I am pretty sure there is, but can't remember what it was. Also, what if the main part of the joke isn't an answer? What would it still be called?
word-request
add a comment |
If I start a joke with a question, then answer it as part of a joke. What is the answer of the joke called? Is there a specific term for it? I am pretty sure there is, but can't remember what it was. Also, what if the main part of the joke isn't an answer? What would it still be called?
word-request
Previously at EL&U, What is the first part of a joke called?
– choster
Apr 17 at 17:06
Can you provide the context for believing that there is a single word that would mean just this?
– James K
yesterday
add a comment |
If I start a joke with a question, then answer it as part of a joke. What is the answer of the joke called? Is there a specific term for it? I am pretty sure there is, but can't remember what it was. Also, what if the main part of the joke isn't an answer? What would it still be called?
word-request
If I start a joke with a question, then answer it as part of a joke. What is the answer of the joke called? Is there a specific term for it? I am pretty sure there is, but can't remember what it was. Also, what if the main part of the joke isn't an answer? What would it still be called?
word-request
word-request
edited yesterday
yoozer8
1,56821332
1,56821332
asked Apr 17 at 10:48
frbsfokfrbsfok
1,117525
1,117525
Previously at EL&U, What is the first part of a joke called?
– choster
Apr 17 at 17:06
Can you provide the context for believing that there is a single word that would mean just this?
– James K
yesterday
add a comment |
Previously at EL&U, What is the first part of a joke called?
– choster
Apr 17 at 17:06
Can you provide the context for believing that there is a single word that would mean just this?
– James K
yesterday
Previously at EL&U, What is the first part of a joke called?
– choster
Apr 17 at 17:06
Previously at EL&U, What is the first part of a joke called?
– choster
Apr 17 at 17:06
Can you provide the context for believing that there is a single word that would mean just this?
– James K
yesterday
Can you provide the context for believing that there is a single word that would mean just this?
– James K
yesterday
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
I'm not sure if it's the 'main' part (after all, the setup is just as important) but you're probably looking for the phrase punch line (also spelled as a single word punchline):
the sentence, statement, or phrase (as in a joke) that makes the point
(source: Merriam-Webster)
It's often used for jokes which are like short stories; I'm not entirely sure if it applies to Q&A jokes as well (I'm not a native speaker).
25
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
3
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
6
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
8
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
add a comment |
The other part (which may be the long part, so it may count as the "main" part to some) is the Setup.
I found a Glossary of Comedy Terminology, if you have other humor-related questions.
I re-read and saw you were answering about the "punchline" area -- I think it's not so much that this second part is an "answer," but that it typically changes/challenges the audience's assumptions.
In the one liner: "Take my wife... please!" the assumption at the start is "I've got a good example about someone who does something stereotypical, my wife." But then with the "please!" it changes from an introduction to a longer section, to a direct, imperative command. Take her. Now. Make her go away. It's not pretty, but it's a change-in-direction, and that's what made it "work."
Some related terms from the Comedy Glossary that may help identify these parts of the joke:
Decoy Assumption - the misdirecting assumption in a joke's setup which creates the 1st story and is shattered by the reinterpretation.
Connector - at the center of a joke, the one thing perceived in at least two ways. One way of perceiving it constitutes the decoy assumption; the second way of perceiving it reveals the reinterpretation.
Shatter - with reference to joke structure, the point at which the audience realized that their assumption is incorrect.
Punch or Punch Line - the second part of a joke that contains a reinterpretation that creates a 2nd story that shatters the setup's decoy assumption.
Reveal - within the punch, the pivotal word, phrase, or action that exposes or presents the 2nd story's reinterpretation.
Tag or Tag Line - an additional punch immediately following a punch that does not require a new setup
New contributor
add a comment |
As everyone else has said, the bit at the end that (hopefully) causes the audience to collapse in fits of laughter is known as the punchline.
If it's a more lengthy humorous story with lots of funny bits, but either a weak punchline, or no punchline, or a more serious point at the end treated lightly by what came before, then the whole thing may be a shaggy dog story, which Wikipedia defines as:
an extremely long-winded anecdote characterized by extensive narration of typically irrelevant incidents and terminated by an anticlimax or a pointless punchline.
add a comment |
Edit: I didn't properly read what Glorfindel said, but he's right. My bad, sorry.
I would say this is still called a punchline: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/punchline
"The last part of a story or a joke that explains the meaning of what has happened previously or makes it funny".
It's usually what finishes off the joke and makes people laugh.
New contributor
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
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votes
I'm not sure if it's the 'main' part (after all, the setup is just as important) but you're probably looking for the phrase punch line (also spelled as a single word punchline):
the sentence, statement, or phrase (as in a joke) that makes the point
(source: Merriam-Webster)
It's often used for jokes which are like short stories; I'm not entirely sure if it applies to Q&A jokes as well (I'm not a native speaker).
25
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
3
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
6
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
8
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
add a comment |
I'm not sure if it's the 'main' part (after all, the setup is just as important) but you're probably looking for the phrase punch line (also spelled as a single word punchline):
the sentence, statement, or phrase (as in a joke) that makes the point
(source: Merriam-Webster)
It's often used for jokes which are like short stories; I'm not entirely sure if it applies to Q&A jokes as well (I'm not a native speaker).
25
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
3
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
6
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
8
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
add a comment |
I'm not sure if it's the 'main' part (after all, the setup is just as important) but you're probably looking for the phrase punch line (also spelled as a single word punchline):
the sentence, statement, or phrase (as in a joke) that makes the point
(source: Merriam-Webster)
It's often used for jokes which are like short stories; I'm not entirely sure if it applies to Q&A jokes as well (I'm not a native speaker).
I'm not sure if it's the 'main' part (after all, the setup is just as important) but you're probably looking for the phrase punch line (also spelled as a single word punchline):
the sentence, statement, or phrase (as in a joke) that makes the point
(source: Merriam-Webster)
It's often used for jokes which are like short stories; I'm not entirely sure if it applies to Q&A jokes as well (I'm not a native speaker).
answered Apr 17 at 10:50
GlorfindelGlorfindel
6,454113141
6,454113141
25
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
3
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
6
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
8
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
add a comment |
25
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
3
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
6
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
8
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
25
25
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
And for the record, the first part of the joke also has a name: The "setup".
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 17 at 13:27
3
3
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
I'd say Q&A style jokes are some of the easiest to determine what the punchline is. For a simple example, in "Why is six afraid of seven?", you would call "Because seven eight nine!" the punchline because you could say it is the sentence/statement/phrase that makes it a joke.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:13
6
6
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
@Glorfindel I can't think of any rule that absolutely defines what counts as a "line" in English (or the origin of "punchline"). Presumably, if it's anything like scripts, what constitutes a "line" has nothing really to do with how many words the line is. Also, I would say a single word can still be a statement, so it can fit your definitions still.
– JMac
Apr 17 at 14:34
8
8
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
To build on what JMac said in reply to @Glorfindel. "Punchline" and "setup" don't even have to refer to words at all and can apply to jokes that are entirely non-linguistic. When someone says "Pull my finger", that is the setup, and the ensuing fart is the punchline.
– Shufflepants
Apr 17 at 15:52
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
For example if you go to a ball, there would be a line to hire a tuxedo, a line to hire a car, a line for the girl you want to ask out but hopefully there won't be a punchline.
– Borgh
yesterday
add a comment |
The other part (which may be the long part, so it may count as the "main" part to some) is the Setup.
I found a Glossary of Comedy Terminology, if you have other humor-related questions.
I re-read and saw you were answering about the "punchline" area -- I think it's not so much that this second part is an "answer," but that it typically changes/challenges the audience's assumptions.
In the one liner: "Take my wife... please!" the assumption at the start is "I've got a good example about someone who does something stereotypical, my wife." But then with the "please!" it changes from an introduction to a longer section, to a direct, imperative command. Take her. Now. Make her go away. It's not pretty, but it's a change-in-direction, and that's what made it "work."
Some related terms from the Comedy Glossary that may help identify these parts of the joke:
Decoy Assumption - the misdirecting assumption in a joke's setup which creates the 1st story and is shattered by the reinterpretation.
Connector - at the center of a joke, the one thing perceived in at least two ways. One way of perceiving it constitutes the decoy assumption; the second way of perceiving it reveals the reinterpretation.
Shatter - with reference to joke structure, the point at which the audience realized that their assumption is incorrect.
Punch or Punch Line - the second part of a joke that contains a reinterpretation that creates a 2nd story that shatters the setup's decoy assumption.
Reveal - within the punch, the pivotal word, phrase, or action that exposes or presents the 2nd story's reinterpretation.
Tag or Tag Line - an additional punch immediately following a punch that does not require a new setup
New contributor
add a comment |
The other part (which may be the long part, so it may count as the "main" part to some) is the Setup.
I found a Glossary of Comedy Terminology, if you have other humor-related questions.
I re-read and saw you were answering about the "punchline" area -- I think it's not so much that this second part is an "answer," but that it typically changes/challenges the audience's assumptions.
In the one liner: "Take my wife... please!" the assumption at the start is "I've got a good example about someone who does something stereotypical, my wife." But then with the "please!" it changes from an introduction to a longer section, to a direct, imperative command. Take her. Now. Make her go away. It's not pretty, but it's a change-in-direction, and that's what made it "work."
Some related terms from the Comedy Glossary that may help identify these parts of the joke:
Decoy Assumption - the misdirecting assumption in a joke's setup which creates the 1st story and is shattered by the reinterpretation.
Connector - at the center of a joke, the one thing perceived in at least two ways. One way of perceiving it constitutes the decoy assumption; the second way of perceiving it reveals the reinterpretation.
Shatter - with reference to joke structure, the point at which the audience realized that their assumption is incorrect.
Punch or Punch Line - the second part of a joke that contains a reinterpretation that creates a 2nd story that shatters the setup's decoy assumption.
Reveal - within the punch, the pivotal word, phrase, or action that exposes or presents the 2nd story's reinterpretation.
Tag or Tag Line - an additional punch immediately following a punch that does not require a new setup
New contributor
add a comment |
The other part (which may be the long part, so it may count as the "main" part to some) is the Setup.
I found a Glossary of Comedy Terminology, if you have other humor-related questions.
I re-read and saw you were answering about the "punchline" area -- I think it's not so much that this second part is an "answer," but that it typically changes/challenges the audience's assumptions.
In the one liner: "Take my wife... please!" the assumption at the start is "I've got a good example about someone who does something stereotypical, my wife." But then with the "please!" it changes from an introduction to a longer section, to a direct, imperative command. Take her. Now. Make her go away. It's not pretty, but it's a change-in-direction, and that's what made it "work."
Some related terms from the Comedy Glossary that may help identify these parts of the joke:
Decoy Assumption - the misdirecting assumption in a joke's setup which creates the 1st story and is shattered by the reinterpretation.
Connector - at the center of a joke, the one thing perceived in at least two ways. One way of perceiving it constitutes the decoy assumption; the second way of perceiving it reveals the reinterpretation.
Shatter - with reference to joke structure, the point at which the audience realized that their assumption is incorrect.
Punch or Punch Line - the second part of a joke that contains a reinterpretation that creates a 2nd story that shatters the setup's decoy assumption.
Reveal - within the punch, the pivotal word, phrase, or action that exposes or presents the 2nd story's reinterpretation.
Tag or Tag Line - an additional punch immediately following a punch that does not require a new setup
New contributor
The other part (which may be the long part, so it may count as the "main" part to some) is the Setup.
I found a Glossary of Comedy Terminology, if you have other humor-related questions.
I re-read and saw you were answering about the "punchline" area -- I think it's not so much that this second part is an "answer," but that it typically changes/challenges the audience's assumptions.
In the one liner: "Take my wife... please!" the assumption at the start is "I've got a good example about someone who does something stereotypical, my wife." But then with the "please!" it changes from an introduction to a longer section, to a direct, imperative command. Take her. Now. Make her go away. It's not pretty, but it's a change-in-direction, and that's what made it "work."
Some related terms from the Comedy Glossary that may help identify these parts of the joke:
Decoy Assumption - the misdirecting assumption in a joke's setup which creates the 1st story and is shattered by the reinterpretation.
Connector - at the center of a joke, the one thing perceived in at least two ways. One way of perceiving it constitutes the decoy assumption; the second way of perceiving it reveals the reinterpretation.
Shatter - with reference to joke structure, the point at which the audience realized that their assumption is incorrect.
Punch or Punch Line - the second part of a joke that contains a reinterpretation that creates a 2nd story that shatters the setup's decoy assumption.
Reveal - within the punch, the pivotal word, phrase, or action that exposes or presents the 2nd story's reinterpretation.
Tag or Tag Line - an additional punch immediately following a punch that does not require a new setup
New contributor
edited Apr 17 at 14:02
New contributor
answered Apr 17 at 13:47
AprilApril
44115
44115
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
As everyone else has said, the bit at the end that (hopefully) causes the audience to collapse in fits of laughter is known as the punchline.
If it's a more lengthy humorous story with lots of funny bits, but either a weak punchline, or no punchline, or a more serious point at the end treated lightly by what came before, then the whole thing may be a shaggy dog story, which Wikipedia defines as:
an extremely long-winded anecdote characterized by extensive narration of typically irrelevant incidents and terminated by an anticlimax or a pointless punchline.
add a comment |
As everyone else has said, the bit at the end that (hopefully) causes the audience to collapse in fits of laughter is known as the punchline.
If it's a more lengthy humorous story with lots of funny bits, but either a weak punchline, or no punchline, or a more serious point at the end treated lightly by what came before, then the whole thing may be a shaggy dog story, which Wikipedia defines as:
an extremely long-winded anecdote characterized by extensive narration of typically irrelevant incidents and terminated by an anticlimax or a pointless punchline.
add a comment |
As everyone else has said, the bit at the end that (hopefully) causes the audience to collapse in fits of laughter is known as the punchline.
If it's a more lengthy humorous story with lots of funny bits, but either a weak punchline, or no punchline, or a more serious point at the end treated lightly by what came before, then the whole thing may be a shaggy dog story, which Wikipedia defines as:
an extremely long-winded anecdote characterized by extensive narration of typically irrelevant incidents and terminated by an anticlimax or a pointless punchline.
As everyone else has said, the bit at the end that (hopefully) causes the audience to collapse in fits of laughter is known as the punchline.
If it's a more lengthy humorous story with lots of funny bits, but either a weak punchline, or no punchline, or a more serious point at the end treated lightly by what came before, then the whole thing may be a shaggy dog story, which Wikipedia defines as:
an extremely long-winded anecdote characterized by extensive narration of typically irrelevant incidents and terminated by an anticlimax or a pointless punchline.
edited yesterday
J.R.♦
101k8129249
101k8129249
answered Apr 17 at 12:48
nigel222nigel222
33514
33514
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Edit: I didn't properly read what Glorfindel said, but he's right. My bad, sorry.
I would say this is still called a punchline: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/punchline
"The last part of a story or a joke that explains the meaning of what has happened previously or makes it funny".
It's usually what finishes off the joke and makes people laugh.
New contributor
add a comment |
Edit: I didn't properly read what Glorfindel said, but he's right. My bad, sorry.
I would say this is still called a punchline: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/punchline
"The last part of a story or a joke that explains the meaning of what has happened previously or makes it funny".
It's usually what finishes off the joke and makes people laugh.
New contributor
add a comment |
Edit: I didn't properly read what Glorfindel said, but he's right. My bad, sorry.
I would say this is still called a punchline: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/punchline
"The last part of a story or a joke that explains the meaning of what has happened previously or makes it funny".
It's usually what finishes off the joke and makes people laugh.
New contributor
Edit: I didn't properly read what Glorfindel said, but he's right. My bad, sorry.
I would say this is still called a punchline: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/punchline
"The last part of a story or a joke that explains the meaning of what has happened previously or makes it funny".
It's usually what finishes off the joke and makes people laugh.
New contributor
edited Apr 17 at 12:26
New contributor
answered Apr 17 at 12:18
ArnoudArnoud
213
213
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Previously at EL&U, What is the first part of a joke called?
– choster
Apr 17 at 17:06
Can you provide the context for believing that there is a single word that would mean just this?
– James K
yesterday