boffola

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English

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Etymology

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From boff +‎ -ola.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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boffola (plural boffolas)

  1. A coarse or farcical gag; a joke provoking hearty laughter.
    • 1961, Al Hine, Lord love a duck, page 215:
      "You're here to set off skyrockets for Barbara Anne, not to regale us with the steam-room boffolas of Beverly Hills." "Well, I thought it was a cute story," Mr. Blakelee said.
    • 1979, Newsweek (volume 94, part 2, page 70)
      You laugh all the harder because the movie never winds up to hit you with a boffola.
    • 1992, Jib Fowles, Why Viewers Watch: A Reappraisal of Television's Effects, page 119:
      These are the people whose laughter you hear after the boffolas on shows that have been filmed without audiences. I don't suppose all these laughers are dead, but a lot of them must be by this time.