Subj : one more anecdote To : Roy Witt From : alexander koryagin Date : Sat Mar 03 2018 08:24:55 From: "alexander koryagin" F2EP Hi, Roy Witt! How are you? on Tuesday, 27 of November, I read your message to alexander koryagin about "one more anecdote" [skipped] ak>> A postman (amazed): RW> The postman, in utter amazement proclaims: Do you thing that my variant too short for understanding? ak>> "Oh, dear me! RW> and asks, ak>> Is your mother at home?" ak>> The boy (with his eyes goggled, tittering): Try to guess, man! RW> chuckling ------------------------------^ and I'd say something to the RW> effect of 'chuckling to himself'... RW> You don't want your reader consulting their dictionaries to learn RW> the definition of a strange word when a simpler, everyday word will RW> keep the reader's interest in your story and work just as well. OK, however, you can find "tittering" in well-known books. For instance, in Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer." =========Beginning of the citation============== The tittering rose higher and higher -- the cat was within six inches of the absorbed teacher's head -- down, down, a little lower, and she grabbed his wig with her desperate claws, clung to it, and was snatched up into the garret in an instant with her trophy still in her possession! =========The end of the citation================ I believe that, maybe, "tittering" expresses "chuckling" but in more nasty and derisive way. Children are very nasty sometimes. I think that Homer Simpson begins choking his son Bart when he tittering at him, not just chuckling. [...Drink you printer away, save a tree!] Bye Roy! Alexander (yAlexKo[]yandex.ru) + 2:5020/2140.91 fido7.english-tutor 2012 --- ifmail v.2.15dev5.4 * Origin: Demos online service (2:5020/400) .