joke

(noun)

Something said or done for amusement.

Related Terms

  • humor
  • irony

Examples of joke in the following topics:

  • Using Humor

    • Using a joke to start a presentation is often a good idea if used properly.
    • Beginning a presentation with a joke can be an effective strategy for winning over one's audience, provided the speaker or author knows his or her audience well.
    • However, the speaker better hope the audience thinks the joke is funny!
    • Most often, keeping one's joke clean is prudent, as not to create discomfort among the audience.
    • Also helpful is telling a joke relevant to the subject being presented.
  • Humor

    • It would be great if you had a joke or humorous story in mind for every possible occasion, but probably you don't.
    • According to one of his longtime writers, Sherwood Schwartz, Hope wanted to "get there, and fast" in all his jokes.
    • "You knew that if you wrote a joke for Bob, you had to knock out every word that didn't count.
    • Once, when I worked as a college administrator, I e-mailed a lawyer joke to a large group of faculty members.
    • You might have noticed that the joke I began this section with doesn't specify whether the offending boss was male or female.
  • Feedback: Visual and Verbal Cues

    • If you tell a joke or a funny anecdote, you expect laughter as your feedback.
    • One good way to tell if your joke bombed--no laughter.
  • The Beginning

    • Will you start with a quote, statistic, personal story, a joke, or an overview?
    • Using a joke to start a presentation is often a good idea, as long as it is appropriate.
    • Also, try to make the joke pertain to the subject you are presenting.
    • Using an overview as an opening would be a good choice if you are unsure how your audience will react to a joke or a startling statistic.
  • Write Productively-Part I

    • Some folks effortlessly recall jokes and quips by the dozen.
    • Lots of people don't remember jokes at all, however, whether good or bad.
    • A good chunk of the explosive growth in e-mail communication over the last 10-15 years consists of jokes and other materials meant to amuse us.
  • Likeability of Political Candidates

    • Politicians may consciously attempt to augment their likeability by donating to charities, telling jokes during speeches, or posing for photos with voters.
  • The Interactionist Perspective

    • When the receptionist hangs up the CEO's jacket, he takes on a subservient position; when the receptionist makes excuses for the CEO missing a deadline, he accepts responsibility for the CEO's mistake; when the receptionist laughs at jokes that he does not find funny, he flatters the CEO because he recognizes that his job depends on doing so.
  • Other Speeches: Farewells, Toasts, and After-Dinner Remarks

    • You may jot down a few key talking points or maybe a specific joke or anecdote that you wish to include.
  • Hydrogen Spectra

    • (It was a running joke that any theory of atomic and molecular spectra could be destroyed by throwing a book of data at it, so complex were the spectra.)
  • The Speaking Outline

    • An introduction - This includes notes on whether the speaker starts with a quote, statistics, personal story, or humorous joke.
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Business
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Communications
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

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