• परिहाससंग्रह • विनोदग्रंथ • विनोदिका | |
jest: ठट्ठा ठठ्ठा ताना | |
book: ग्रंथ लेखा-बही | |
jest book मीनिंग इन हिंदी
jest book उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
अधिक: आगे- Bowdlerisation in the 19th century completed the fall of the English-language jest book from Elizabethan vitality to subsequent triviality.
- Jest books took a generally mocking tone, with civility, and social superiors like the'stupid scholar'as favourite targets.
- The anecdote was repeated as an amusing story in the English jest book " Book of Emblems ", the first of many editions of which appeared in 1531.
- Also, although he denies it, he writes with style, being fond of alliteration, and within a tradition of vulgar writing in chapbooks and jest books, which included crude and sexual references.
- For some time before his death he had been engaged on a drama, " Death's Jest Book ", which was published in 1850 with a memoir by his friend, T . F . Kelsall.
- Soon afterwards a close translation appeared in the English jest book Merry Tales and Quick Answers ( c . 1530 ), but in general the trend among later fabulists has been to embroider upon the rather threadbare narration of Abstemius.
- T . F . Kelsall was the literary executor and friend of Thomas Lovell Beddoes, and edited some of his published work, including the notable " Death's Jest Book : or, The Fool's Tragedy ", in 1850.
- Poggio's jest book and the English'Merry Tales', on the other hand, avoid drawing a moral and end on the popular idiom of'swimming against the current', used of just such characters as the contrary wife is said to be.
- Such writing was at the time widely acceptable; Sir Thomas More, and Erasmus wrote jests, the latter including a fart joke, and on her deathbed in 1603 courtiers read to Queen Elizabeth from the jest book " A Hundred Merry Tales ", ( 1526 ).
- Often bawdy, sometimes satirical, usually comic, and something of the nature of'farce', these sung-dramas, or'stage-jigs', drew their plots from folk tales, jest books, and Italian novellas and were populated by an assortment of traditional stock characters and tricksters, such as'cuckolds, rustic clowns, fools, bawdy wenches, enterprisingly faithless wives, gullible and cuckolded husbands, blustering soldiers, slippery gentlemen, foolish constables easily outwitted, prurient Puritans, falsely coy maidens and drunken foreigners '.