Or possibly, it is just the gap where the ha-ha is broken to allow the turn-in from the road. |
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This cartoon may be more funny-odd than funny ha-ha, but it's original and starkly captivating. |
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A wide lawn runs down the centre of the garden, so it melds almost imperceptibly over a ha-ha into the surrounding parkland, planted with fine trees. |
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These stories are of the funny peculiar rather than the funny ha-ha variety. |
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It was a real laugh, a ha-ha laugh, unlike the fit of hysterics he'd had earlier. |
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A ha-ha was a six-foot deep ditch, vertical at the edge of the property, so that the neighbor's cattle could graze right up to the line, appearing to be one's own. |
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How strange that people can find mirth in articles that contain so little as long as they have the impression that the author is a funny ha-ha joker. |
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I don't mean funny ha-ha, the kinds of things that wither and die under the scrutiny of the average dry or verging-on-non-existent sense of humour, but quirky. |
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It seems that a ha-ha has been banked up to hide the public thoroughfare from which one turns down the private avenue of limes to approach the manor house. |
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I still got a funny feeling about all this, and I don't mean funny ha-ha. |
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She laughs, not a funny ha-ha laugh but rather a tiny self-inflicted chuckle of disgust. |
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Living proof if it were needed that there's a big difference between funny ha-ha and funny peculiar. |
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Love is a funny thing and I don't mean funny ha-ha, I mean funny peculiar and sometimes trying to hard to understand it makes things more difficult. |
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Ha-ha walls are built in ditches so they keep out livestock but don't ruin the view. |
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