Cracking jokes is to me the most familiar contextual usage of this term.
Why would anyone say they were cracking jokes, not just telling jokes?
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Cracking jokes is to me the most familiar contextual usage of this term. Why would anyone say they were cracking jokes, not just telling jokes? |
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There is a difference between "Crack" and "Tell" when it comes to jokes. To crack a joke is to make an original witty remark (i.e. something that, in context, is funny, but would not necessarily stand alone as humor); to tell a joke is to relate a bit of humor that is expected to be received well by your audience. A sample of the difference: Your friend says "Hey, did you hear this news story? A bookie in Vegas was attacked by one of his customers." You say "Wow, I guess they were really at odds with each other. Baaahaha!" You have just cracked a joke. A small, lame pun-based joke, to be sure, but still. Your friend says "How many mice does it take to screw in a light bulb? Two, but how did they get into the lightbulb in the first place?" Your friend has just told a joke. |
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You will also see (especially in the UK and Ireland) "cracking on" for telling a story or speaking extendedly, and "enjoying the crack" for getting together with friends to talk. That one is often spelled "craic" but Wikipedia is insistent it came from English crack: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craic. |
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According to the book A etymological dictionary of the Scottish language, published in 1887, it comes ultimately from the french word craquer (emphasis mine):
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The term 'crack' appears in many contexts where both quickness and accuracy are involved, such as 'crack shot' or 'crackerjack wit'. I suspect it's an onomatopoeia thing due to the plosive 'k' sounds at both the beginning and end of the word sounding like the 'crack of a whip'. |
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I would say that "crack" (in this context) is a FORM of telling, rather than "telling" itself. You can "tell" a joke, with a straight face and a monotone and not get any laughs. To make a joke funny, you need to "crack" it as you "tell" it. Think of cracking open a nut. Or popcorn "crackling" with butter over an open fire. |
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