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Humourous   Listen
adjective
humourous  adj.  Same as humorous; causing amusement or laughter. (Narrower terms: bantering, facetious, tongue-in-cheek, witty; boisterous, knockabout, slapstick; buffoonish, clownish, zany; comic, comical, funny, laughable, risible; droll, waggish; dry, ironic, ironical, pawky, wry; farcical, ludicrous, ridiculous; Gilbertian; hilarious, uproarious; jesting, jocose, jocular, jocund, joking; merry, mirthful; seriocomic, seriocomical; tragicomic, tragicomical; killing, sidesplitting) Also See: pleasing.
Synonyms: humorous.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Humourous" Quotes from Famous Books



... curiously marked. Francis Ledsam conformed in no way to the accepted physical type of his profession. He was over six feet in height, broad-shouldered and powerfully made. His features were cast in a large mould, he was of fair, almost sandy complexion, even his mouth was more humourous than incisive. His eyes alone, grey and exceedingly magnetic, suggested the gifts which without a doubt lay behind his ...
— The Evil Shepherd • E. Phillips Oppenheim

... "They are always humourous or pathetic," remarked Alice. "Some of them remind me of a person trying to laugh with a heart full of sorrow, and their love ...
— The Further Adventures of Quincy Adams Sawyer and Mason's Corner Folks • Charles Felton Pidgin

... here in humourous exaggeration;—these passages are not meant to be taken, nor are we to suppose that they were taken, literally;—but if there was not a ground of truth, if Falstaff had not had such a degree of Military reputation as was capable of being thus humourously amplified and exaggerated, the whole ...
— Eighteenth Century Essays on Shakespeare • D. Nichol Smith

... represented it, in a severe sarcasm, that will never be forgotten; for as he was swaying and reeling his whole body from side to side, Julius enquired very merrily, who it was that was speaking from a boat. To the same purpose was the jest of Cn. Sicinius, a very vulgar sort of man, but exceedingly humourous, which was the only qualification he had to recommend him as an Orator. When this man, as Tribune of the people, had summoned Curio and Octavius, who were then Consuls, into the Forum, and Curio had delivered a tedious harangue, while Octavius ...
— Cicero's Brutus or History of Famous Orators; also His Orator, or Accomplished Speaker. • Marcus Tullius Cicero

... could not think lightly of a trifle or deal with it lightly; and he would appeal, I now think, to motives more exalted than the occasion justified. A little heedless utterance would be met by him not by a half-humourous word, but by a grave and solemn remonstrance. We feared his displeasure very much, but we could never be quite sure what would provoke it. If he was in a cheerful mood, he might pass over with a laugh or an ironical word what in a sad or anxious mood would evoke an indignant and weighty censure. ...
— Hugh - Memoirs of a Brother • Arthur Christopher Benson


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