A master’s thesis in the College of Education for Human Sciences discussed humor and immorality in Ibn Nabatah’s poetry, by student Zaka Juma’a, under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Badran Abdel-Hussein Mahmoud. It was known that it tends to laugh, smile and spend beautiful times, including enjoyment of amusement and frivolity. Al-Masry reflected this in his poetry with a character of laughter, wit and sarcasm, as well as his employment of vocabulary and methods compatible with these two phenomena, and he succeeded in this in a distinctive and creative way. Humor and sarcasm were for the sake of humour, joking and humidifying the atmosphere, and was not for the sake of demeaning others, in addition to the fact that his promiscuity was a year that did not reach the stage of vice and obscenity.