A postcard of a type commonly sold at seaside resorts, especially one that is light-heartedly bawdy or vulgar.
as modifier a dash of seaside postcard humour
Example sentencesExamples
- I have to admit that I was uncertain whether to treat this as a comedy record given it's tongue-in-cheek seaside postcard humour charm.
- A seaside postcard that reminds people of an episode from their childhood is more art than random holiday snapshot.
- An exhibition of saucy seaside postcards aims to take visitors back to an era when naughty was nice.
- He owed much to bawdy British seaside postcards, and his films had an overall texture that was clever and gently anti-Establishment.
- A British cartoonist whose name is synonymous with a distinctive type of jolly seaside postcard in which the humour depends on sexual innuendo of an unsubtle but mild sort.
- It had a cheeky little script that conjured up images of traditional seaside postcards on Blackpool promenade.
- Like a saucy seaside postcard, you are regarded as naughty but not threatening, a bit of a fun.
- It must be still more disconcerting if you are female and had assumed that bottom-pinching was a practice now found only in kitsch seaside postcards.
- He appears to have stepped out from a saucy seaside postcard.
- The Carry Ons are what I call English seaside postcard comedies: perfectly harmless, but saucy.
- The video shelf is in keeping with her seaside postcard humour.