Your last two make their pun with Tom's verb, rather than with an adverb. I've heard that this varient is called a "croaker", but I'd call it a Tom Swiftie.
quote:"I see," said the blind man, "it's all coming back to me now," as he stood there, peeing into the wind.
... inspiring this:
"I see," said the blind carpenter, as he picked up his hammer and saw.
* ** *** ***** ******** ***** *** ** *
Thanks for the warm "welcome back," Kalleh. Since mid-September I've been showing a couple of first-time visitors around my native state -- Colorado -- and today I'm driving the length of Oklahoma. Friday I will return to Hawaii, God willing and if the Creeks don't rise.
~~~ jerry
Posts: 6708 | Location: Kehena Beach, Hawaii, U.S.A.
The name Elia Kazan always struck me as a good one for a magician. The above post brought back a not-quite-a-Tom-Swifty-but-close that I wrote years ago for a play (a group effort - writing by committee is a horror I've since avoided!) which promptly tanked:
The magician, making the corpse disappear, shouted "Abra Cadaver!"
Sorry to bring the news that it's been reincarnated. Do you read the Harry Potter books at all? The Forbidden Curse which kills (accompanied by a flash of green light) is "Avra Kedavra"...
Great! Just watch, once again I won't see a penny of it.
As the author of the children's drug education book "Harry's a Pothead and the Sorcerer's Stoned," this won't be the first time those bastards screwed me out of some serious royalties.
quote:Originally posted by jerry thomas: Has this habit of responding to compliments with self flagelation been a part of your life for a long time, C.J.?
Generally not. With Shufitz, B.H., R.E., Arnie etc etc etc to attend to this process, self-flagelation would simply be redundant.
I was just mildly miffed that I had come up with a rather pleasant play on words and then included such an easily avoided flaw.
And regarding age, it's 95% mental. I've known 25-year-olds who were ready for the Old Folk's Home and, on the other hand, once had an extremely mind-boggling affair with a woman very much my senior. (Yowzah!!)
I had assumed that the descriptive word had to qualify the verb describing Tom's actions - in the most recent example, "said".
That being the case then an adverb is the only part of speech possible.
Though I have to say that I felt that the adverb in that last example would better have been embarrassedly rather than embarrassingly. Tom was embarrassed; he was not embarrassing.
Richard English
Posts: 8038 | Location: Partridge Green, West Sussex, UK
Sheesh! Why do they talk behind my back?, Kalleh asks supinely.
Embarrassedly then.
Jerry, that was a good site. I had thought they all had to be adverbs, but I see that Hic is right about a variant. For example, I liked, "The fountian is broken," Tom spouted.
[This message was edited by Kalleh on Mon Jan 5th, 2004 at 21:27.]
BTW, just for the record, "embarrassingly" could mean that Tom told his friend about his strip poker game, in an attempt to embarrass her, thus embarrassingly [You can't blame a woman for trying! ]