Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that
any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious
class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose
reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster.
Serendipitously, indeed.
I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home
to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. I can do
that in an hour, I think, over lunch. I don't know why I don't keep a
"Harbrace" here at the office. Perhaps, it's that you're falling back
on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. I can appreciate
that.
--
Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English
formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning
with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first
syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more
familiar: "An" historian.
Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that.