Poll - Total Votes: 24 See Poll Options
Muffintopgina · 26-30, F
Silly lol
I use a lot of sarcasm. Is that dry humor?
@FrogManSometimesLooksBothWays Sarcastic is Don Rickles, dry is Bob Newhart.
@NativePortlander1970 Interesting.
Queendragonfly · 31-35, F
I'm easy to a laughter and sometimes likes sarcasm.
katydidnt · 61-69, F
Self-deprecating, a'la Paula Poundstone, but not so harsh on individuals in the audience.
FreestyleArt · 36-40, M
It comes naturally to me
Deceased · M
My sense of humor is dark and a bit twisted.
smiler2012 · 61-69
@AnnMayonaise 🤔if you follow me on similar worlds you will know i am dry as an old chip lol 😆
Zaphod42 · 51-55, M
Somewhere between Chris Titus and Monty Python

SW-User
I was informed my humor is Stark.
GuyWithOpinions · 31-35, M
The options are too pessimistic

SW-User
dark and incoherent
Pfuzylogic · M
Light hearted
Fullmetal · 51-55, M
So dry it farts dust!!
bijouxbroussard · F
Wry; sarcastic enough that some people miss it.

SW-User
@bijouxbroussard no one every picks up on the sarcasm!
bijouxbroussard · F
@SW-User Only the folks who have gotten to know me.
ChadJNSD · 18-21, M
Dry, mean and cutting.

SW-User
Dark, silly, pervy, random... Slapstick isn't my style tho.
WillaKissing · 56-60, M
Dry with a sense of sarcasm and slap stick. Pervy to dark.
PoetryNEmotion · F
Dry and also funny as hell. Please fix your sentence. You are shocking me. Living in the city you should be more careful!

SW-User
Silly
AbbeyRhode · F
Silly, corny, old-fashioned.
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SW-User
@SW-User
No I take the piss lol 😂 in a jokey way.
Taking the piss is a colloquial term meaning to mock at the expense of others, or to be joking, without the element of offence. It is also sometimes phrased as a question, 'are they taking the piss?', when referring to an individual who takes above and beyond what is thought acceptable, similar to the expression, 'give them an inch and they take a mile.'[1] It is a shortening of the idiom taking the piss out of, which is an expression meaning to mock, tease, joke, ridicule, or scoff.[2] It is not to be confused with "taking a piss", which refers to the act of urinating. Taking the Mickey (Mickey Bliss, Cockney rhyming slang), taking the Mick or taking the Michael are additional terms for making fun of someone. These terms are most often used in the United Kingdom, Ireland, South Africa, New Zealand and Australia. In 2022 the Daily Mail mistakenly quoted a parody Twitter account of Sir Michael Take, CBE believing him to be a former Conservative MP for West Dorset (a constituency which was abolished in 1950) [3]
No I take the piss lol 😂 in a jokey way.
Taking the piss is a colloquial term meaning to mock at the expense of others, or to be joking, without the element of offence. It is also sometimes phrased as a question, 'are they taking the piss?', when referring to an individual who takes above and beyond what is thought acceptable, similar to the expression, 'give them an inch and they take a mile.'[1] It is a shortening of the idiom taking the piss out of, which is an expression meaning to mock, tease, joke, ridicule, or scoff.[2] It is not to be confused with "taking a piss", which refers to the act of urinating. Taking the Mickey (Mickey Bliss, Cockney rhyming slang), taking the Mick or taking the Michael are additional terms for making fun of someone. These terms are most often used in the United Kingdom, Ireland, South Africa, New Zealand and Australia. In 2022 the Daily Mail mistakenly quoted a parody Twitter account of Sir Michael Take, CBE believing him to be a former Conservative MP for West Dorset (a constituency which was abolished in 1950) [3]

SW-User
@SW-User thank god im not european

SW-User
@SW-User
British humour. 🤣
British humour. 🤣
Generally sarcastic
@NativePortlander1970 Join the club, man. 👌