Sarcasm
>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sarcasm is sneering, jesting, or mocking a person, SITUATION or THING.
It is often used in a humorous or ironic manner.

Usage

The term is frequently misused as a synonym for irony. Irony refers
however to the literal meaning and the intended meaning of the words
uttered being different, while sarcasm refers to the mocking intent of
the utterance. It is possible to be ironic without being sarcastic,
and to be sarcastic without being ironic.

Sarcasm is also regularly confused with cynicism, which in common use
is seen as a fundamental nihilistic attitude toward other people and
life in general, whereas sarcasm can also be used to express positive
ideas or sentiments.

 ===================== EXAMPLES ======================

[Note -- Per below, it bears a strong resemblance to "obsrvational
humor" and comedians' one-liners.]

http://www.theotherpages.org/quote-16.html


 ----- SERIOUS SARCASM  (163 entries) -----

This is a collection of rather biting wit from a variety of
curmudgeons. There are a few milder comments sprinkled here and there,
but many are like Rita Rudner's: "I love being married. It's so great
to find that one special person you want to annoy for the rest of your
life." --Steve


- A -

   1. Politics makes estranged bedfellows.
       -- Goodman Ace

   2. A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his
government.
       -- Edward Abbey

   3. There is no such thing as an underestimate of average intelligence.
       -- Henry Adams

   4. Most of the time I don't have much fun. The rest of the time I
don't have any fun at all.
       -- Woody Allen

   5. I will not eat oysters. I want my food dead. Not sick, not
wounded, dead.
       -- Woody Allen

   6. Jack Benny played Mendelsson last night. Mendelsson lost.
       -- Anonymous

   7. I don't mind what language an opera is sung in so long as it is
a language I don't understand.
       -- Sir Edward Appleton


- B -

   1. People seem to enjoy things more when they know a lot of other
people have been left out of the pleasure.
       -- Russel Baker

   2. A bureaucrat is a Democrat who holds some office that a
Republican wants.
       -- Alben W. Barkley

   3. Life is a long lesson in humility.
       -- James M. Barrie

   4. If you suveyed a hundred typical middle-aged Americans, I bet
you'd find that only two of them could tell you their blood types, but
every last one of them would know the theme song from the 'Beverly
Hillbillies'.
       -- Dave Barry

   5. The word aerobics comes from two Greek words: aero, meaning
"ability to," and bics, meaning "withstand tremendous boredom."
       -- Dave Barry

   6. The old system of having a baby was much better than the new
system, the old system being characterized by the fact that the man
didn't have to watch.
       -- Dave Barry

   7. I've noticed that one thing about parents is that no matter what
stage your child is in, the parents who have older children always
tell you the next stage is worse.
       -- Dave Barry

   8. It is not necesssary to understand things in order to argue
about them.
       -- Caron de Beaumarchais

   9. It is quite untrue that British people don't appreciate music.
They may not understand it but they absolutely love the noise it makes.
       -- Sir Thomas Beecham

  10. Everything is worth precisely as much as a belch, the difference
being that a belch is more satisfying.
       -- Ingmar Bergman

  11. The gambling known as business looks with austere disfavor upon
the business known as gambling.
       -- Ambrose Bierce

  12. Calamities are of two kinds: misfortunes to ourselves, and good
fortune to others.
       -- Ambrose Bierce

  13. Rugby is a beastly game played by gentlemen; soccer is a
gentleman's game played by beasts; football is a beastly game played
by beasts.
       -- Henry Blaha

  14. One thing they never tell you about child raising is that for
the rest of your life, at the drop of a hat, you are expected to know
your child's name and how old he or she is.
       -- Erma Bombeck

  15. I do not participate in any sport with ambulances at the bottom
of a hill.
       -- Erma Bombeck

  16. Guidelines for Bureaucrats: 1. When in charge, ponder. 2. When
in trouble, delegate. 3. When in doubt, mumble.
       -- James H. Borden

  17. The one function that TV news performs very well is that when
there is no news we give it to you with the same emphasis as if it were.
       -- David Brinkley

  18. The difference between a violin and a viola is that a viola
burns longer.
       -- Victor Borge

  19. You can't make up anything anymore. The world itself is satire.
All you're doing is recording it.
       -- Art Buchwald

  20. Man is the only animal that can remain on friendly terms with
the victems he intends to eat until he eats them.
       -- Samuel Butler


- C -

   1. I can't understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I'm
frightened of old ones.
       -- John Cage

   2. Automatic simply means that you can't repair it yourself.
       -- Frank Capra

   3. We're having something a little different this year for
Thanksgiving. Instead of a turkey, we're having a swan. You get more
stuffing.
       -- George Carlin

   4. An economist is a surgeon with an excellent scalpel and a
rough-edged lancet, who operates beautifully on the dead and tortures
the living.
       -- Nicholas Chamfort

   5. You don't have to suffer to be a poet; adolescence is enough
suffering for anyone.
       -- John Ciardi

   6. I find it rather easy to protray a businessman. Being bland,
rather cruel and incompetent comes naturally to me.
       -- John Cleese

   7. I believe in luck: how else can you explain the success of those
you don't like?
       -- Jean Cocteau

   8. Cookbooks bear the same relation to real books that microwave
food bears to your grandmother's.
       -- Andrei Codrescu

   9. Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first call promising.
       -- Cyril Connolly

  10. I don't believe in astrology. The only stars I can blame for my
failures are those that walk about the stage.
       -- Noel Coward

  11. The trouble with children is that they are not returnable.
       -- Quentin Crisp


- D -

   1. An appeal is when you ask one court to show it's contempt for
another court.
       -- Finley Peter Dunne

   2. Most vegetarians look so much like the food they eat that they
can be classified as cannibals.
       -- Finley Peter Dunne


- E -

   1. Never judge a book by its movie.
       -- J.W. Eagan

   2. History teaches us that men and nations behave wisely once they
have exhausted all other alternatives.
       -- Abba Eban

   3. Canada has never been a melting pot; more like a tossed salad.
       -- Arnold Edinborough


- F -

   1. For most men life is a search for the proper manilla envelope in
which to get themselves filed.
       -- Clifton Fadiman

   2. Early morning cheerfulness can be extremely obnoxious.
       -- William Feather

   3. You can't find any true closeness in Hollywood, because
everybody does the fake closeness so well.
       -- Carrie Fisher

   4. Instant gratification takes too long.
       -- Carrie Fisher

   5. To be stupid, selfish, an have good health are three
requirements for happiness, though if stupidity is lacking, all is lost.
       -- Gustave Flaubert

   6. Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in hospitals
dying of nothing.
       -- Redd Foxx

   7. Hell hath no fury like a bureaucrat scorned.
       -- Milton Friedman


- G -

   1. I believe in equality for everyone, except reporters and
photographers.
       -- Gandhi

   2. The meek shall inherit the earth, but not the mineral rights.
       -- J. Paul Getty

   3. Not a shred of evidence exists in favor of the idea that life is
serious.
       -- Brendan Gill

   4. People come to Washington believing it is the center of power. I
know I did. It was only much later that I learned that Washington is a
steering wheel that's not connected to an engine.
       -- Richard Goodwin

   5. No, Groucho is not my real name. I am breaking it in for a friend.
       -- Groucho Marx


- H -

   1. I like a friend better for having faults that one can talk about.
       -- William Hazlitt

   2. There are more fools in the world than there are people.
       -- Heinrich Heine

   3. Death will be a great relief. No more interviews.
       -- Katherine Hepburn

   4. This paperback is very interesting, but I find it will never
replace a hardcover book -- it makes a very poor doorstop.
       -- Alfred Hitchcock

   5. I understand the inventor of the bagpipes was inspired when he
saw a man carrying an indignant, asthmatic pig under his arm.
Unfortunately, the manmade sound never equalled the purity of the
sound achieved by the pig.
       -- Alfred Hitchcock

   6. There are several differences between a footballl game and a
revolution. For one thing, a football game usually lasts longer and
the participants wear uniforms. Also there are more injuries at a
football game.
       -- Alfred Hitchcock

   7. Seeing a murder on television can help work off one's
antagonisms. And if you haven't any antagonisms, the commercials will
give you some.
       -- Alfred Hitchcock

   8. When people are free to do as they please, they usually imitate
each other.
       -- Eric Hoffer

   9. A pessimist is a man who has been compelled to live with an
optimist.
       -- Elbert Hubbard

  10. A good listener is usually thinking about something else.
       -- Kin Hubbard

  11. Nothing is as irritating as the fellow who chats pleasantly
while he's overcharging you.
       -- Kin Hubbard

  12. The fellow that agrees with everything you say is either a fool
or he is getting ready to skin you.
       -- Kin Hubbard

  13. One of the simple but genuine pleasures in life is getting up in
the morning and hurrying to a mousetrap you set the night before.
       -- Kin Hubbard

  14. Classical music is the kind we keep thinking will turn into a tune.
       -- Kin Hubbard

  15. Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you mad.
       -- Aldous Huxley

  16. Most human beings have an almost infinite capacity for taking
things for granted.
       -- Aldous Huxley


- I -

   1. Events in the past may be roughly divided into those which
probably never happened and those which do not matter.
       -- W. R. Inge


- J -

   1. Everyone has a right to a university degree in America, even if
it's in Hamburger Technology.
       -- Clive James

   2. We English are good at forgiving our enemies; it releases us
from the obligation of liking our friends.
       -- P.D. James

   3. Banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies.
       -- Thomas Jefferson


- K -

   1. The avoidance of taxes is the only intellectual pursuit that
carries any reward.
       -- John Maynard Keynes

   2. The nice thing about being a celebrity is that when you bore
people, they think it's their fault.
       -- Henry Kissinger

   3. Ninty percent of the politicians give the other ten percent a
bad name.
       -- Henry Kissinger

   4. Everyone who ever walked barefoot into his child's room late at
night hates Legos.
       -- Tony Kornheiser

   5. An economist is a man who states the obvious in terms of the
incomprehensible.
       -- Alfred A. Knopf

   6. Both the cockroach and the bird could get along very well
without us, although the cockroach would miss us most.
       -- Joseph Wood Krutch

   7. The trouble with America isn't that the poetry of life has
turned to prose, but that it has turned to advertising copy.
       -- Louis Kronenberger


- L -

   1. Radio news is bearable. This is due to the fact that while the
news is being broadcast, the disk jockey is not allowed to talk.
       -- Fran Lebowitz

   2. Every time I look at you I get a fierce desire to be lonesome.
       -- Oscar Levant

   3. Advertising is a valuable economic factor because it is the
cheapest way of selling goods, especially if they are worthless.
       -- Sinclair Lewis

   4. People will buy anthing that is 'one to a customer.'
       -- Sinclair Lewis


- M -

   1. Once a newspaper touches a story, the facts are lost forever,
even to the protagonists.
       -- Norman Mailer

   2. Not even computers will replace committees, because committees
buy computers.
       -- Edward Shepherd Mead

   3. It is even harder for the average ape to believe that he has
decended from man.
       -- H.L. Mencken

   4. Say what you will about the ten commandments, you must always
come back to the pleasant fact that there are only ten of them.
       -- H.L. Mencken

   5. Nothing fixes a thing so intensely in memory as the wish to
forget it.
       -- Montaigne

   6. Our national flower is the concrete cloverleaf.
       -- Lewis Mumford


- N -

   1. The trouble with a kitten is that it eventually beomes a cat.
       -- Ogden Nash

   2. I don't understand the appeal of Spuds McKenzie. He's always
surrounded by beautiful women. Now, I'm single, and I know the
pickin's can be mighty slim, but you have to be really desperate to
date out of your own species.
       -- Susan Norfleet


- O -

   1. Never raise your hand to your children; it leaves your
midsection unprotected.
       -- Robert Orben

   2. Cab drivers are living proof that practice does not make perfect.
       -- Howard Ogden


- P -

   1. Politics is the skilled use of blunt objects.
       -- Lester Pearson

   2. Bureaucracy defends the status quo long past the time when the
quo has lost its status.
       -- Laurence J. Peter

   3. Equal opportunity means everyone will have a fair chance at
being incompetent.
       -- Laurence J. Peter

   4. A financier is a pawnbroker with imagination.
       -- Arthur Wing Pinero


- R -

   1. Americans will put up with anything provided it doesn't block
traffic.
       -- Dan Rather

   2. It is after you have lost your teeth that you can afford to buy
steaks.
       -- Pierre August Renoir

   3. There ought to be one day -- just one -- where there is open
season on senators.
       -- Will Rogers

   4. When those waiters ask me if I want some fresh ground pepper, I
ask if they have any aged pepper.
       -- Andy Rooney

   5. I don't like food that's too carefully arranged; it makes me
think that the chef is spending too much time arranging and not enough
time cooking. If I wanted a picture I'd buy a painting.
       -- Andy Rooney

   6. No degree of dullness can safeguard a work against the
determination of critics to find it facinating.
       -- Harold Rosenberg

   7. If I had a hammer, I'd use it on Peter, Paul, and Mary.
       -- Howard Rosenberg

   8. In Hollywood a marriage is a success if it outlasts milk.
       -- Rita Rudner

   9. Most turkeys taste better the day after; my mother's tasted
better the day before.
       -- Rita Rudner

  10. My husband gave me a necklace. It's fake. I requested fake.
Maybe I'm paranoid, but in this day and age, I don't want something
around my neck that's worth more than my head.
       -- Rita Rudner

  11. My husband and I are either going to buy a dog or have a child.
We can't decide whether to ruin our carpet or ruin our lives.
       -- Rita Rudner

  12. I want to have children and I know my time is running out: I
want to have them while my parents are still young enough to take care
of them.
       -- Rita Rudner

  13. I love being married. It's so great to find that one special
person you want to annoy for the rest of your life.
       -- Rita Rudner

  14. Someday I want to be rich. Some people get so rich they lose all
respect for humanity. That's how rich I want to be.
       -- Rita Rudner

  15. Beethoven always sounds to me like the upsetting of a bag of
nails, with here and there an also dropped hammer.
       -- John Ruskin

  16. I squirm when I see athletes praying before a game. Don't they
realize that if God took sports seriously he never would have created
George Steinbrenner.
       -- Mark Russel


- S -

   1. Acting is like roller skating. Once you know how to do it, it is
neither stimulating nor exciting.
       -- George Sanders

   2. In order to fully realize how bad a popular play can be, it is
necessary to see it twice.
       -- George Bernard Shaw

   3. There are only two classes in good society in England: the
equestrian class and the neurotic class.
       -- George Bernard Shaw

   4. The English are not very spiritual people, so they invented
cricket to give them some idea of eternity.
       -- George Bernard Shaw

   5. If the French were really intelligent, they'd speak English.
       -- Wilfred Sheed

   6. There are more bad musicians than there is bad music.
       -- Isaac Stern

   7. Politics is perhaps the only profession for which no preparation
is thought necessary.
       -- Robert Louis Stevenson

   8. The best reason I can think of for not running for president of
the United States is that you have to shave twice a day.
       -- Adlai Stevenson

   9. Some people approach every problem withan open mouth.
       -- Adlai Stevenson

  10. Skill without imagination is craftsmanship and gives us many
useful objects such as wickerwork and picnic baskets. Imagination
without skill gives us modern art.
       -- Tom Stoppard

  11. Blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall never be
disappointed.
       -- Johnathan Swift


- T -

   1. Ants are so much like human beings as to be an
embarrasment...They do everything but watch television.
       -- Lewis Thomas

   2. I am not a cat man, but a dog man, and all felines can tell this
at a glance -- a sharp, vindictive glance.
       -- James Thurber

   3. If I have any beliefs about immortality, it is that certain dogs
I have known will go to heaven, and very, very few persons.
       -- James Thurber

   4. Progress was all right. Only it went on too long.
       -- James Thurber

   5. I personally think we developed language because of our deep
need to complain.
       -- Lily Tomlin

   6. The national sport of England is obstacle racing. People fill
their rooms with useless and cumbersome furniture, and spend the rest
of their lives trying to dodge it.
       -- Herbert Beerbohm Tree

   7. Canada is a country whose main exports are hockey players and
cold fronts. Our main imports are baseball players and acid rain.
       -- Pierre Trudeau

   8. Reader, suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member
of Congress. But I repeat myself.
       -- Mark Twain

   9. Familiarity breeds contempt -- and children.
       -- Mark Twain

  10. Honesty is the best policy -- when there is money in it.
       -- Mark Twain

  11. I would like to live in Manchester, England. The transition
between Manchester and death would be unnoticeable.
       -- Mark Twain

  12. Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied
even to prayer.
       -- Mark Twain


- U -

   1. If you can find something everyone agrees on, it's wrong.
       -- Mo Udall

   2. A healthy adult male bore consumes each year one and a half
times his own weight in other people's patience.
       -- John Updike

   3. If the world should blow itself up, the last audible voice would
be that of an expert saying it can't be done.
       -- Peter Ustinov


- V -

   1. Muscles come and go; flab lasts.
       -- Bill Vaughan

   2. An ugly baby is a very nasty object, and the prettiest is
frightful when undressed.
       -- Queen Victoria

   3. Today's public figures can no longer write their own speeches or
books, and there is some evidence that they can't read them either.
       -- Gore Vidal


- W -

   1. Having the critics praise you is like having the hangman say
you've got a pretty neck.
       -- Eli Wallach

   2. Actions lie louder tha words.
       -- Carolyn Wells

   3. Perhaps, after all, America never has been discovered. I myself
would say that it merely had been detected.
       -- Oscar Wilde

   4. The basis of action is lack of imagination. It is the last
resource of those who know not how to dream.
       -- Oscar Wilde

   5. It is only the intellectually lost who ever argue.
       -- Oscar Wilde

   6. When good Americans die they go to Paris. When bad Americans die
they go to America.
       -- Oscar Wilde

   7. I love acting. It is so much more real than life.
       -- Oscar Wilde

   8. It is only by not paying one's bills that one can hope to live
in the memory of the commercial classes.
       -- Oscar Wilde

   9. No woman should ever be quite accurate about her age. It looks
so calculating.
       -- Oscar Wilde

  10. Between men and women there is no friendship possible. There is
passion, enmity, worship, love, but no friendship.
       -- Oscar Wilde

  11. Women are never disarmed by compliments. Men always are. That is
the difference between the sexes.
       -- Oscar Wilde

  12. Creative semantics is the key to contemporary government; it
consists of talking in strange tongues lest the public learn the
inevitable inconveniently early.
       -- George Will

  13. I did a picture in England one winter and it was so cold I
almost got married.
       -- Shelley Winters

  14. All the things I really like to do are either illegal, immoral,
or fattening.
       -- Alexander Wolcott

  15. There's a fine line between fishing and just standing on the
shore like an idiot.
       -- Steven Wright


- Y -

   1. An incompetent attorney can delay a trial for months or years. A
competent attourney can delay one even longer.
       -- Evelle J. Younger


- Z -

   1. The United States is a nation of laws: badly written and
randomly enforced.
       -- Frank Zappa

   2. It is a fitting irony that under Richard Nixon, 'launder' became
a dirty word.
       -- William Zinsser


©1994 Stephen L. Spanoudis, All Rights Reserved Worldwide







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