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I feel like a silly object!

2015-06-01ByMarshaHenderson

疯狂英语·新策略 2015年4期

By Marsha Henderson

I feel like a silly object!

By Marsha Henderson

Bad joke - clever wordplay

Patient: Doctor! Doctor! I feel like a pair of curtains.

Doctor: Pull yourself together!

Why do the British think this is funny? They don’t. They enjoy the fact that it’s such a bad joke. It’s a clever piece of wordplay, though. There are two important parts to it.

Firstly, ‘I feel like…’. When we don’t feel well, we sometimes use an idiomatic way of saying it, for example ‘I feel like death warmed up’ means ‘I feel terrible’.

Then, the doctor uses a well-known idiom. It works because if you look at the normal meaning of each separate word in the phrase, it doesn’t mean anything at all. We say, ‘Pull yourself together!’ when we want someone to be calm. Speaking literally, ‘pulling yourself together’ is just silly. However, we could pull a pair of curtains together.

Here’s another one which works the same way.

Doctor! Doctor! I feel like a pack of cards.

I’ll deal with you later.

What do we do with cards? We deal them before we play with them. Parents and teachers sometimes say ‘I’ll deal with you later’, when they are planning to punish a child; and a third meaning of dealing with something is solving a problem.

Real life

However, sometimes the jokes use real-life problems; here’s one that talks about not being able to sleep.

Doctor! Doctor! I’ve got insomnia.

Sleep on the edge of the bed, you’ll soon drop off.

Do you understand? You drop off to sleep, but here it also means to fall off the bed.

Your turn

Can you invent one yourself? Think of an idiom, like ‘go downhill’ for instance. What do the words actually mean? Move down a hill. Now think of something connected to that. A sledge, perhaps?

Doctor! Doctor! I feel like a ……….!

Yes, I can see you’re ……….……….

Now try creating your own.