12 Of The Funniest Memes On The Internet
What would we do without memes?
Damjan
- Published in Funny
Great memes are soul food. Bad memes can make you die inside. Thanks to the busy meme creators, the Internet is full of them, good and bad.
We are devoted to finding the best memes and helping your mental well-being by serving them in easy consumable packages. Creating a good meme is art. Now, we may not know about art, but we know what we like.
A meme is an idea, habit, or style that circulates throughout society through imitation and frequently bears symbolic significance that refers to a specific occurrence or topic. Using writing, speech, gestures, rituals, or other imitable occurrences with a replicated subject, a meme serves as a unit for transferring cultural ideas, symbols, or practices from one mind to another.
Memes, according to proponents of the theory, behave like genes in that they self-replicate, mutate, and adapt to environmental cues. Internet memes—typically images—that are remixed, duplicated, and spread online as part of a common cultural experience are referred to as memes in everyday speech.
We have selected some of the funniest memes on the Internet, and we know you are going to love them. And come asking for more.
Long live the memes! What would we do without them?
1. Sounds like a plan
All great accomplishments must be rewarded.
someecard2. Music makes everything better.
A shiny music star.
someecards3. Remember me?
I am back.
someecards4. Nice try
Maybe next time…
someecardsRichard Dawkins is credited with creating the term "meme" in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene. Even Dawkins' own perspective is not quite clear. He commended N. K. Humphrey for saying that memes "should be treated as living structures, not simply symbolically" and suggested that memes be thought of as "physically dwelling in the brain."
Despite the fact that Dawkins said his first goals had been simpler, he agreed with Humphrey's assessment and supported Susan Blackmore's 1999 initiative to provide a scientific theory of memes that included predictions and empirical backing.
5. Like a laptop
Waiting for the next upgrade.
someecards6. He is cute.
Do you have more pictures?
someecards7. Finally!
I want more.
someecards8. Maybe a little bit different…
someecards9. Thinking time.
I am never going down.
someecards10. Make your own happiness.
It doesn’t take much to be happy.
someecards11. Let’s put that theory to the test.
Poor people invented it.
someecards12. Some people have it rough.
They can get sunburns, sand in their bathing suits, get stranded on a deserted island.
someecardsThe word meme is a contraction of mimeme, which comes from Ancient Greek mīmēma (μίμημα; pronounced [míːmɛːma]), meaning 'imitated thing', itself from mimeisthai (μιμεῖσθαι, 'to imitate'), from mimos (μῖμoς, 'mime')
Any cultural thing that an observer may consider a replication is what Dawkins meant by the word. He proposed that many cultural elements may be seen as replicators, citing songs, trends, and acquired abilities as examples. Humans, who have developed into skilled copycats of knowledge and behavior, are the main source of meme replication.
Memes vary throughout time because people don't always reproduce them accurately and because they can be improved, combined, or changed in various ways to produce new memes.
And we are so happy they exist and evolve, aren't we?