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  2. Joking relationship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joking_relationship

    Donald F. Thomson's article "The Joking Relationship and Organized Obscenity in North Queensland" gives an in-depth discussion of a number of societies where these two speech styles co-exist. [4] The joking relationships which are most unconstrained and free are between classificatory Father's Father and Son's Son—which appears to be the same ...

  3. Joke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joke

    The context of joking in turn leads to a study of joking relationships, a term coined by anthropologists to refer to social groups within a culture who take part in institutionalised banter and joking. These relationships can be either one-way or a mutual back and forth between partners. The joking relationship is defined as a peculiar ...

  4. Sanankuya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanankuya

    In addition, the custom of non-blood relatives according each other the status of familial relationships ("play" aunts, cousins, etc.) may be derived from this custom. The Traoré and Koné clans each maintain a sanankuya relationship with the others' members. One of their biggest running jokes is that each clan will accuse the other of loving ...

  5. Humor styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humor_styles

    Examples of self-defeating items on the Humor Styles Questionnaire might include: I often try to make people like or accept me more by saying something funny about my own weaknesses, blunders, or faults. If I am having problems or feeling unhappy, I often cover it up by joking around, so that even my closest friends don’t know how I really feel.

  6. Self-referential humor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-referential_humor

    Self-referential humor, also known as self-reflexive humor, self-aware humor, or meta humor, is a type of comedic expression [1] that—either directed toward some other subject, or openly directed toward itself—is self-referential in some way, intentionally alluding to the very person who is expressing the humor in a comedic fashion, or to some specific aspect of that same comedic expression.

  7. Fictive kinship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fictive_kinship

    Fictive kinship (less often, fictional kinship [1] [2]) is a term used by anthropologists and ethnographers to describe forms of kinship or social ties that are based on neither consanguineal (blood ties) nor affinal ("by marriage") ties.

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  9. Avunculate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avunculate

    The special relationship existing in some societies between a maternal uncle and his sister's son; maternal uncles regarded as a collective body. 1920 R. H. LOWIE Prim. Soc. v. 81 Ethnologists describe under the heading of avunculate the customs regulating in an altogether special way the relations of a nephew to his maternal uncle.