"Guffaw" Quotes from Famous Books
... a guffaw; for the tow-path here ran within two furlongs of the high road, and a man upon skates cannot ... — Hetty Wesley • Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
... jokes about pigs and potatoes. In Scotland, thriftiness and oatmeal were the themes of his pleasantry; in Wales, he found the language, the literature, and the local nomenclature equally comic, and reserved his loudest guffaw for the Eisteddfod. Abroad, "Foreigners don't wash" was the all-embracing formula. Nasality, Bloomerism, and Dollars epitomized his notion of American civilization; and he cheerfully ... — Prime Ministers and Some Others - A Book of Reminiscences • George W. E. Russell
... funny that his friends must laugh; (although really, Romans, it is possible to contemplate a sort of sphinx figure, "a human head to a horse's neck," and so on, varied plumes and all, without much chance of a guffaw;) and yonder sickly-looking clerk, perched upon his high stool, penning "stanzas while he should engross," is the lugubrious caricature of Apollo on his ... — The Complete Prose Works of Martin Farquhar Tupper • Martin Farquhar Tupper
... a will, "Ave Maria," "O maris Stella," and half the Paternoster, when Biagio burst into a guffaw, and gave Luca a push which ... — Little Novels of Italy • Maurice Henry Hewlett
... half-hour later, with petticoats raised to a height gravely imperilling decency, they splashed landward across the causeway—now ankle-deep in water—while the lads congregated before the Inn laughed boisterously, the men turned away with a guffaw, dogs of disgracefully mixed parentage yelped, and the elder female members of the Proud and Sclanders families flung phrases lamentably subversive of gentility after their retreating figures ... — Deadham Hard • Lucas Malet
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