Limericks: Laugh along with these fun verses!
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 ก.ย. 2024
- A limerick is usually a witty poem of five lines in which the first, second and fifth lines rhyme with each other. And the third and fourth lines, which are shorter than the rest, rhyme with each other.
Episode #97
TITLE: 10 limericks to make you laugh.
Edward Lear is called the father of the limerick because he popularised this form of poetry long ago. Listen to his hilarious limericks in this video.
Lear called his book of such poems A Book of Nonsense. A lot of limericks, written by him and others, start with the words ‘There was a young lady…’ Often, the words that follow are quite bawdy.
The other famous writer of limericks was Ogden Nash. His sense of humour made him my favourite poet when I was a child. Here’s one of my favourite limericks written by Nash:
A flea and a fly in a flue
Were imprisoned, so what could they do?
Said the fly, "let us flee!"
"Let us fly!" said the flea.
So they flew through a flaw in the flue.
I love the alliteration in this verse-find out what that means in the video.
Learn the meaning of 'flue'--which is not the same as 'flu'.
While limericks are generally thought of as humorous poems for adults, they can be nursery rhymes too.
Tommy Thumb’s Pretty Songbook was the first collection of English nursery rhymes. It contained a limerick which you and I learned in kindergarten. That's in the video too.
The origin of the term limerick is thought to come from the name of a place called. I'll tell you about that place in the video.
You'll also get to hear a famous American limerick.
It seems difficult to talk about English without mentioning Shakespeare. Sure enough, he used a limerick as a drinking song. You'll discover that in the video too.
Poets used to spar in verse in pubs. I'll tell you the limericks used in one such fight.
You'll also come to know why limericks were originally called learics.
As a tribute to him, I have written the following limerick:
Last but not least, you'll get to hear a limerick written by none other than... The English Nut!
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Your tribute was the best of all the limericks
Very beautiful.
You brought me good morning cheer,
I often wish to ride on a deer,
The laughs are often infectious,
Limericks are too delicious,
Thank you father Lear.
Haha!
You are just awesome! Loved your Learic👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼
Excellent
Hilarious nonsense 🤣🤣....loved it...
Liked!!!
Very nice sir
The last line of your limerick was hilarious 😂
Thanks! :)
I love the way you accentuate words that really need attention for a better understanding and pronunciation.Thank you ♥️
Thanks a lot!
@@TheEnglishNut Welcome sir
For a while I have been in a rut
Then I chanced upon The English Nut
He has charming long hair,
He speaks with flair.
It seems, English spills out from his gut!
:-)
Nice! Thanks. :)
I loved your learic
You are such a rare
Who made me aware
Of the language I was not aware
Knowledge so rare, thanks for share
English nut has become my prayer
Thanks for the ritual so rare.
Thank you. 🙂
Limericks are fun! :)
Hello sir😊🙏, please bring us a video about novels,story books we should read for betterment of morals,values and ENGLISH.😍
Yes! 😄
Yeah, they are!
yes sir
Yes , please ....
The limerick you wrote is quite hilarious! 👏👏
:)
Great video. This video reminded me of a rhyming sentence I used:
Tattered with trepidation, we teetered like a turtle.
What Aabol taabol to a bangali child is & am sure no one could top that EVER! Jaar Khushi dekhey essho Haruder aapishe! As a matter of fact although the book is penned for children the adults too till this date sit back and guffaw at the mare mention of the book,such was our Sukumar Roy father of ‘Mr Ray’.
Yes, true!
Oh yayy!!! Love limericks ☺️☺️
Great!
Charming. You've captured the spirit of the limerick, paid tribute to Lear and the greats and educated us in Language History and pronunciation in one short video! Thanks. 😀
Glad you enjoyed it. :)
What a charming gift on a Sunday Morning ;-)
Glad you liked it. :)
Superb👌..Nutty Sunday Morning!!
Good morning!
Bisbo's limerick 😄
There was a young lady named Sally,
Who enjoyed the occasional dally.
She sat on the lap of a well-endowed chap,
And cried "Sir! You're right up my alley!"
This is on the first episode of The Crown!
@@TheEnglishNut Indeed..👍
It's interesting video. All the time i am gathering the nuts of knowledge:) Thank you dear sir.
It was so hilarious ! Enjoyed the video thoroughly 👏👏
Great. Thanks. :)
Thanks for sharing this interesting piece and your limerick tribute is 👌
Thanks!
Sir,I tried the following limerick:
Some are gray and yellow are few,
Spread your wings; in your tarry is the blue,
Let your pinions dip in the sun,
Give a halt to this mad race and run,
And meet the bird within you!
Profound!
So informative!! I don't know why you are so underrated!!
Please help spread the word!
Sir I am a big fan of your knowledge and contents you share.I shall definitely try to write a Limerick and will share with you all very soon
Great! Thanks! :)
it was really a delight to know about the origin of limerick.
Don't you think TEN is extremely charming! Watching you is a treat to both eyes and ears.
:):)
It was quite an enthralling session ; educative as well as nostalgic ! It was educative because I got to know when these were written , how the word "limerick" came to be part of the English language and it was certainly nostalgic to listen to the good old "hickory dickory dock ...." ~~ a favourite of my kindergarten days !
Lastly I must mention you did a fairly decent job with the one that you wrote ! Keep up the good work , English Nut !
👍
Thank you! So I got a B+ for my limerick! :)
@@TheEnglishNut, nope it's not a B+ ; it's A+++ ! 😊👏👏😊
@@bulbulchatterjee3630 Why, thank you! :)
@@TheEnglishNut, it's actually quite good which merits A+++ but during my childhood I often saw my father being rather stingy / muted in his praise of others , specially me !😉🙄 This continued through my college years where the professors were rather muted in acknowledging our hard work with a B+ from them would see us celebrating and A / A+ . I think that has rubbed on to me , big time .
So your B+ is equivalent to A+++ of mine !😂
But for the limericks, I'm pretty much "poetically challenged" :-)
Good etymology of limericks, and a good one by you as a tribute to Mr Edward Lear 👏
Glad you enjoyed it! :)
I found the Indian Bard atlast!
I found ur limerick d best
Sir I became fan of your knowledge and the way of presenting the contents
Thanks. :)
Amazing content! Never heard of limericks before!
I appreciate your Limerick...🎉
I love your presentation dude, and the way of your speaking style is absolutely super.
Thanks so much! :)
Firstly, it is very soothing, whenever I listen to you. And this video, has been my favourite now. Because, Limerick was something, I have always read but had no idea about its origin and other stuffs related to it. So, thanks a lot for this video. 😇
Glad you liked it. Thanks. :)
@@TheEnglishNut my pleasure, sir.
Really enjoyed this episode.. Limericks
Namaskaram
Angel loved this .
The music that runs with the video is the wake up call for angel on a Sunday morning .
Waldorf has a range of these poems .
She loved the one written by you too. she Was laughing .
Blessings and bliss
Glad she liked the limericks... and the music!
Loved it❤️
Hey! I wrote the following limerick-
There is a young lad from Lucknow cute,
He never tries to remain mute,
During lectures he sleeps,
In exams he peeps,
And so are his grades acute!
Thanks for this video! Big ups!
Nice. :)
Thank you😊
Bisbo's limerick.
Great Limerick..
Thanks.
I enjoyed your limerick 😋
Thanks. :)
Limericks are❤️❤️❤️❤️
Glad you liked them! :)
@@TheEnglishNut ❤️
Thanx! As always 👌🏻 👍🏻
In May ways
Until I came across the wonderful Mr. English Nut
I was like a wheel stuck in the Rut.
I'll keep following u anyways..... 😊 😁 😄
Thank you! So glad you found The English Nut. :)
@@TheEnglishNut 🙏🏻
WoW!
Writing is my peer
Ohh,how do you feel dear
Limericks are beautiful
Dogs are faithful
O, thank you father Lear
😊
“There once was a hole in the ground
So proud to be perfectly round
That he wanted to cry
When a dog happened by
And turned him into a mound”
Excellent as always, reminding me when I was a kindergarten teacher few years back......keep rocking ...... stay safe and staaaaay blessed .....see you next week .....bye for now🤗👋👋👋
You were a kindergarten teacher. How nice! :)
@@TheEnglishNut really nice experience, only Indian teacher for Chinese students, early English , early science , early mathematics too,.....
@@jiwahgie8811 And now you no longer teach?
@@TheEnglishNut and why you didn't continue your acting career? Your add for Peter England was awesome........
@@jiwahgie8811 Hmmm. Didn't get any more offers! :D
Here’s a limerick from my school days in 1970s Bombay. Pardon the slight adult content, if only but one word.
There was a young lady from Knizes
With breasts of two different sizes.
One was so small, it was nothing at all,
The other was large, and won prizes !!
A book 📖 of nonsense 😄
Yup!
Soo.. I'm the first comment in 2 years. My only question is what's with the pillow in your lap?
The English Nut, am quite nutty over your videos. Quite a treat for a lang and literature buff! Keep Going :)
So glad you like them. :)
Jabberwakki by Lewis Carroll? Isn't that a Limerick? I admire your contents, the manner as well as the matter. 👍
Jabberwocky is by Carroll. But it's not a limerick.
Enjoyed this
Glad you did!
Beautiful ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks!
Wooow...👌👌👌
Thank you Mr.Nut for the wonderful Sunday gift 👌🙏
@@sindhukrishnakumar6021 You are welcome! :)
When people don't watch substance you can safely say they lack the same. :)
Your limerick was the best of all.
Your eyes say a lot 😋
Cute!
So I'm doing a project on limericks for my linguistics class. If you don't mind me asking, how long have you been speaking English? Did you grow up with English or did you learn English? Something i'm trying to see if it non-native English speakers are able to produce the same stressing in limericks as native English speakers do or if it doesn't matter.
I loved this video.....but I have one question, are u an Indian?
Bro you are awsome
Thank you! :)
Thank you! Make a video on why Indians call their teachers as 'sir.'
Güzel
Teşekkürler!
@@TheEnglishNut
rica ederim 😘😘
English Nut : Aliteration Is repeated words.
Me in my mind: KR$NA , BLACKELICIOUS
Your Limerick was quite witty and humorous ✌️ May I know your educational qualifications?
I really want to be expert like you in English
Hello sir! What books are you reading these days? Who is your ideal?
Are you a politician too? I am just curious as you invited Mr. Shashi Tharoor on your youtube channel a few days ago.
Hi- why dont you do a story telling or book reading at Granth or Crossword
Sure, if they ask me to. :)
limericks are a weird but funny stuff. eh, what the heck was that flea, flee, fly, flue, flaw thing? .. lol, now I'm dizzy!
apropos Nursery Rhymes... there's an album by the band Genesis called Nursery Crymes and the similarity to the term 'nursery rhymes' was absolutely intended!
I'm a bit behind with watching the videos ... btw the sound on this video was not so good. Greeting to Mumbai from Germany!
Interesting name for an album. Sound varies as per the location. When I sit in a corner, the sound tends to get distorted.
@@TheEnglishNut yeah, the sound was distorted. the band was a progressive rock band, I love the description "painter of sound pictures".
Sir,
Could you please tell me?
Can we use this sentences in same context or same situations?
1)I want to ask him
2)I want to ask that from him.
3)I have to ask him
4)I have to ask that from him
I and 3 are correct. 2 and 4 are not. 'I want to ask him that.' 'I have to ask him that.'
@@TheEnglishNut thank you
Is there any English word for "jutha"(#not jutta)??
I guess you get what I mean?
Good question! I'm not aware of any word for 'jhoota' in English.
If u get please let me know🔥👍💙
@@rabirai569 Sure.
যদিও William Lear কে limericks এর জনক বলা হয় কিন্তু আপনাকেও limericks এর জাদুকর বললে বেশি বলা হবে না।
JUST A CORRECTION DEAR, YOU PRONOUNCED THE WORD"POEM" WRONG
NO DEAR, THIS IS THE CORRECT BRITISH PRONUNCIATION. THAT 'POME' STUFF IS AMERICAN.
Perhaps there is similarity between limerick and rhyme, but a limerick is humorous..?
A limerick has a specific rhyme scheme, as I mention in the video, and it is usually humorous.
The English Nut Thank you very much Sir, Your video lessons are impeccable and may I ask: how shall one aggrandise one's English knowledge and elocution? Is there particular University in England? I'm eagerly willing to read classic English literature at certain prestigious University ... but slightly below than the renowned Oxford or Cambridge.. thank you
R u sure about ur pronounciation of poem....it is pronounced as po-um as much as ik
He is "THE" English Nut ...he would be knowing better 😕😕🙏
Of course he is 💯 sure about it .......He Is The English Nut.......
To me that's a weird American pronunciation.