Bawdy
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+ | [[Image:Fashionable contrasts James Gillray.jpg |thumb|right|200px|''[[Fashionable Contrasts]]'' ([[1792]]) by [[James Gillray]]]] | ||
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'''Bawdry''' or '''bawdiness''' as a genre in fiction is referred to as [[ribaldry]]. | '''Bawdry''' or '''bawdiness''' as a genre in fiction is referred to as [[ribaldry]]. | ||
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#[[obscene|Obscene]]; [[filthy]]; [[unchaste]]. | #[[obscene|Obscene]]; [[filthy]]; [[unchaste]]. | ||
#Of language: [[sexual|Sexual]] in nature and usually meant to be [[humorous]] but considered [[rude]]. | #Of language: [[sexual|Sexual]] in nature and usually meant to be [[humorous]] but considered [[rude]]. | ||
- | + | ==Etymology== | |
- | ==Keywords== | + | From Middle English bawde, baude, noun form of Old French baud (“[[bold,]] [[lively]], [[jolly]], [[gay]]”), from Old Low Frankish *bald (“bold, proud”), from Proto-Germanic *balþaz (“[[strong]], bold”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰel-, *bʰlē- (“to inflate, swell”). Cognate with Old High German bald (“bold, [[bright]]”), Old English beald (“bold, [[brave]], [[confident]], strong”). More at bold. |
- | [[burlesque]] - [[dirty]] - [[farce]] - [[humour]] - [[obscene]] - [[ribaldry]] - [[vaudeville]] - [[vulgar]] | + | |
- | + | ||
- | == Examples == | + | |
- | * ''[[The Golden Ass|The Golden Ass: Or Metamorphoses]]'' ([[100s]]) - Apuleius - | + | |
- | * ''[[The Indiscreet Jewels]]'' ([[1748]]) - Denis Diderot | + | |
- | * ''[[Rationale of the Dirty Joke]] | + | |
- | *[[Fabliau]] | + | |
- | * ''[[Tristram Shandy]]'' | + | |
- | * ''[[Decameron]]'' | + | |
- | * ''[[Les Cent Nouvelles nouvelles]]'' | + | |
- | *[[Contes en vers]] | + | |
- | + | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
*[[The bawdy origins of rock and roll]] | *[[The bawdy origins of rock and roll]] | ||
+ | *[[Sexual humor]] | ||
+ | *[[Erotic comedy]] | ||
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
Revision as of 10:06, 23 August 2011
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Bawdry or bawdiness as a genre in fiction is referred to as ribaldry.
Adjective
- Obscene; filthy; unchaste.
- Of language: Sexual in nature and usually meant to be humorous but considered rude.
Etymology
From Middle English bawde, baude, noun form of Old French baud (“bold, lively, jolly, gay”), from Old Low Frankish *bald (“bold, proud”), from Proto-Germanic *balþaz (“strong, bold”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰel-, *bʰlē- (“to inflate, swell”). Cognate with Old High German bald (“bold, bright”), Old English beald (“bold, brave, confident, strong”). More at bold.
See also
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Bawdy" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.