Abstract
his study investigates the multifaceted ways in which humor and irony are embedded within and conveyed through idiomatic expressions in everyday language. Focusing on idioms related to various aspects of life – human relationships, social interactions, personal experiences, and observations of the world – this research explores how these fixed phrases often subtly or overtly utilize comedic and ironic devices.
References
1.Uzbek Idioms: Sourced from oral tradition and linguistic studies like Uzbek-English Dictionary by William Dirks (2005, no pagination due to digital format). Cultural context from Uzbekistan: A Cultural History (Britannica, online).
2.English Idioms: Oxford Dictionary of Idioms (3rd ed., 2009), page numbers as cited. The Penguin Dictionary of Proverbs (1983), page numbers as cited.
3.Russian Idioms: Russian-English Dictionary of Idioms by Sophia Lubensky (2013), p. 302.
4.Chinese Idioms: A Dictionary of Chinese Idioms (2008), p. 178.
5.Biblical Reference: Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations (18th ed., 2012), p. 98.

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