单词 | funny |
释义 | funnyn.1 Now historical. A narrow, clinker-built pleasure boat designed to carry a pair of scullers. Also more generally: any small, light boat. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > pleasure vessel > [noun] > for rowing funny1779 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessels propelled by oars or poles > [noun] > rowing boat > sculling-boat sculler1567 scull1611 sculler-boat1663 funny1779 sculling-boat1856 sculling float1874 1779 St. James's Chron. 11–14 July Two Westminster Scholars..were on Saturday overset in one of the Boatmen's Funnies. 1799 Caldron or Follies Cambr. 9 While others woo The well-oar'd funney, or the slim canoo. 1808 Ann. Reg. 109 A young couple..took a sail in a funny off Fulham. 1843 Zoologist 1 293 I was in a ‘funny’—as the small boats at Cambridge are called. 1870 G. W. Dasent Ann. Eventful Life (ed. 4) I. 140 The funnies, cutters, wherries..that thronged the river daily. 1927 Living Age 1 Apr. 620/1 His comrades with their wherries, funnies, and shallops. 1957 D. Pike Paradise of Dissent ix. 205 Goods were usually landed by jollyboats and funnies. 2014 C. Cheater & J. Debenham Austral. Day Regatta iv. 71 The club owned a range of boats that included gigs, skiffs, eight-oared cutters and funnies. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022). funnyadj.n.2adv. A. adj. 1. Humorous, comical, fun; causing laughter or amusement. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [adjective] > comical merryc1390 pleasant1553 comical1575 mowsome1596 zany1616 burlesque1656 humoursome1656 farce-like1681 foolish1691 farcical1715 amusive1727 farciful1731 funny1739 farcic1763 quizzical1785 quizzy1785 quizzish1792 rib-tickling1809 smileable1830 cocasse1868 priceless1907 skit1914 funny-ha-ha1916 gas1955 1739 Hist. Life Richard Turpin 11 They met him at the gate as he was going up to his door, three of them laying their hands upon his head. Mr Francis not apprehending them to be rogues, but done in a frolick, only said to them, methinks you are mighty funny, gentlemen. 1751 London Daily Advertiser 19 Aug. 1/2 A Man who..assures them of a hellish funny thing they'll see soon. 1762 S. Foote Orators i. 4 Is it damn'd funny and comical? 1827 T. De Quincey On Murder in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Feb. 206/2 He became very sociable and funny. 1877 Spirit of Times 24 Nov. 453/3 When this fine artist is on the stage the play is funny, when he is off it is downright flat. 1947 K. Amis Lett. (2000) 119 I shall be able to write you lots of long, funny letters to cheer you up. 1989 Stage 9 Feb. 17/1 The Lone Ranger is funnier than most sit-coms. 2015 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 8 Mar. (Review section) 12/3 Do not send video texts no matter how funny you think they are. 2. slang. Cheerful due to alcohol; slightly drunk, tipsy. Cf. merry adj. 4c. Now rare (U.S. regional in later use). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [adjective] > drunk > partially drunk merrya1382 semi-bousyc1460 pipe merry1542 totty1570 tipsy1577 martin-drunk1592 pleasant1596 mellow1611 tip-merry1612 flustered1615 lusticka1616 well to live1619 jolly1652 happy1662 hazy1673 top-heavy1687 hearty1695 half-seas-over1699 oiled1701 mellowish1703 half channelled over1709 drunkish1710 half-and-half1718 touched1722 uppisha1726 tosie1727 bosky1730 funny1751 fairish1756 cherry-merry1769 in suds1770 muddy1776 glorious1790 groggified1796 well-corned1800 fresh1804 to be mops and brooms1814 foggy1816 how-come-ye-so1816 screwy1820 off the nail1821 on (also, esp. in early use, upon) the go1821 swipey1821 muggy1822 rosy1823 snuffy1823 spreeish1825 elevated1827 up a stump1829 half-cockedc1830 tightish1830 tipsified1830 half shaved1834 screwed1837 half-shot1838 squizzed1845 drinky1846 a sheet in the wind1862 tight1868 toppy1885 tiddly1905 oiled-up1918 bonkers1943 sloshed1946 tiddled1956 hickey- 1751 J. Marchant Puerilia iii. xvi. 144 Now they drink and funny grow. 1756 W. Toldervy Hist. Two Orphans I. 62 More brandy was drank, and, Tom Throw beginning to be what is called funny, the house was full of uproar and confusion. 1825 Mirror Lit., Amusem., & Instr. 7 May 304/1 Massa often say when I funny, Quaco, you drunk! 1866 Natchez (Mississippi) Daily Courier 16 Aug. The belles..think it very amusing to be made ‘funny’ by drinking with gentlemen. 1967–9 in Dict. Amer. Regional Eng. (1991) II. 603/1 When a drinker is just beginning to show the effects of the liquor, you say he's..(Getting) funny. 3. colloquial. a. Odd, peculiar, strange; interesting, surprising, unexpected. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > unconformity > abnormality > [adjective] > odd quaintc1325 awkc1440 queer?a1513 odd1578 quaintish1594 odd-conceiteda1616 odd-ceited1652 whimsical1675 singulara1684 eccentric1685 oddish1705 rummish1709 comical1713 odd-like1718 rum1750 queerish1775 funny1793 quare1805 rummy1828 kinky1844 quirkish1848 quirky1873 odd-gates1906 funny-peculiar1916 antrin1925 off-brand1929 fanciful- 1793 Wonderful Mag. Jan. 406 He had what school boys call a funny phiz. 1806 T. C. Metcalfe in Marquess Wellesley Select. Despatches (1877) 809 This study to decrease our influence is funny. I cannot understand it. 1855 Ld. Houghton Let. in T. W. Reid Life Ld. Houghton (1890) I. xi. 527 Lady Ellesmere was very funny about E. C. Gaskell, wanting very much to Know her, and yet quite shy about it. 1876 Sheffield & Rotherham Independent 20 Mar. 3/2 He had suffered from short memory, and had also funny ways, sometimes sitting for hours and not speaking a word. 1889 Daily Independent (Monroe, Wisconsin) 2 Mar. You never sold any for a dollar? That's funny. I'm sure it was here. 1907 Condor 9 131 Well, it was funny how that wind kept changing. 1920 Scribner's Mag. Nov. 521/2 I came over all funny, so she took me home again very quick. 1937 Life 13 Sept. 77/2 (caption) I feel kind of funny being out of the water. 1957 G. Smith Friends 60 Funny thing is, it seems to improve my game. 1992 N. Singer To still Child (1993) xvi. 114 Well, now.., funny you should mention that. 2007 Independent Extra (Nexis) 29 Mar. 6 I've got a funny feeling that there's something she's not telling me. 2013 Guardian 23 Nov. (Cook Suppl.) 6/1 Even a short stint in the freezer can leave food with that funny taste. b. Unusual in a way which causes suspicion or unease; deceptive, dishonest, unethical; (also) inappropriate, improper. Cf. funny business n. 2. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > [adjective] > deceptive, misleading swikelc1000 fellc1300 deceivable1303 falselya1350 blind1393 deceivant1393 fallacec1400 sinister1411 deceivousa1425 deceitful1483 fallacious1509 deceiving?a1513 falsesome1533 sophistical1558 misconceited1595 deceptive1611 abusable1660 self-deceptive1810 flambuginous1813 false1842 funny1903 mamaguy1973 braidie- the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > lack of confidence, distrust, suspicion > [adjective] > arousing or deserving of suspicion suspecta1300 of suspicion1340 suspect1340 suspicious1340 untrusted1552 suspectiousa1558 suspected1559 suspected to1571 mistrusted1592 mistrustful1593 suspectful1603 slight1607 suspicable1614 distrustful1618 suspicionable1692 jealoused1695 suspectable1748 untrustable1862 funny1903 sus1958 hinky1961 sussy1965 1903 Cosmopolitan Mar. 527/2 The boy lowered the weapon in slow doubt. ‘I trust you, Bill Anstey; don't make no funny moves, though!’ 1911 Proc. 9th Ann. Convent. N. Dakota Bankers' Assoc. 57 If there is any question about the person you have put in, if you think they are trying to do anything funny, you can leave them home next time and put in those whom you can trust. 1942 P. G. Wodehouse Money in Bank xii. 123 He is far too scared of our hostess to try any funny stuff on her. 1978 Washington Post 17 Mar. e2/6 He said he would monitor the economy monthly and, ‘if we see anything funny, we'll act, and boldly’. 2010 M. Gediman Journeywoman 109 ‘You aren't planning to try anything funny are you?’ Paul smiled, ‘I'm flattered, Maggie. Obviously you haven't noticed that I'm just about as old as dirt.’ B. n.2 1. With the. That which is amusing or comical. ΚΠ 1821 W. M. Praed Eve of Battle in Etonian 1 38 A mixture of the grave and funny. 1898 Monist 8 257 Schütze regards the funny as a result of man's limitations. Man believes himself to be free but finds by experience that he is a plaything of nature. The comical reminds man of his dependence upon physical conditions. 1933 Manch. Guardian 5 May 12/5 His jokes, combining the funny and the slightly fantastic, have always an individual air. 1986 W. Sollors Beyond Ethnicity 131 The borderline between the funny and the offensive is difficult to draw. 2006 K. Rivers Quirky Girls' Guide Rest Stops & Road Trips 152 I don't need to tell you that I can find the funny in anything! 2. a. Originally U.S. A funny person or thing; a joke, a witticism. Usually in plural.In quot. 1852 humorously imagined as a commodity on the stock exchange. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > one who or that which is comical comedy1535 toy1542 jest1602 joke1670 comic1674 high comedy1707 humorous1753 comicality1796 funny1852 funniosity1871 hot sketch1917 pisser1918 riot1919 panic1921 cocasserie1934 yell1938 mess1952 crack-up1961 1852 Lantern (N.Y.) 2 114/1 Keeping our dear public advised of all operations in the ‘Funnies’. The past week has been very dull, very; Puns have gone down when a good article was offered, but Jokes are flat. 1892 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 12 Mar. 13/5 Listen to the ‘funnies’ of the clown. 1919 Outers' Recreation Oct. 267/1 In the career of every duck-hunter there are incidents which he has experienced, or knows to be authentic, which are far removed from the usual and which, for the lack of a better name, may, perhaps, be termed ‘Funnies’. 1941 H. Belloc Silence of Sea v. 33 What some modern funnies call ‘wish-fulfilment’. 1959 Punch 30 Dec. 682/2 Makers of pantomimes engaged the ripest music-hall funnies they could find. 1961 John o' London's 14 Sept. 307/1 The best bet would have been to ship this Mexican funny [sc. a film] straight out on circuit. 1970 New Yorker 17 Oct. 148/2 I hear he's a lawyer now, restricted, I suppose, to sneaking in a funny now and then in his summation to the jury. 2013 Radio Times 7 Dec. (South/West ed.) 77/1 Helping John out with the funnies will be Jimmy Carr, Seann Walsh.., and Dame Edna Everage. b. spec. (North American). In plural. Chiefly with the. Comic strips in newspapers, or the section of a newspaper containing these. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journal > matter of or for journals > [noun] > comic strips funny1908 comic1912 1908 National Mag. May 234/1 For long I have been accustomed to read over and over again to a small maiden these ‘funnies’, and imagine my feelings when I see them referred to in a high class magazine as a ‘national shame and degradation’. 1914 Helena (Montana) Independent 6 June 2/5 The Comics. The Independent furnishes four pages ‘of funnies’ each week with its big Sunday newspaper. 1920 C. Sandburg Smoke & Steel 33 About the funnies in the papers. 1936 P. G. Wodehouse Laughing Gas xxvi. 272 We've only read the movie section and the funnies. 1971 Jrnl. Pop. Culture 5 167 The funnies are read by all classes. 1999 W. Coleman Mambo Hips & Make Believe xviii. 220 ‘May I have the funnies?’ ‘Grrrrrr—’ Tamala tore off the back page and handed it over. 2010 M. F. McHugh After Apocalypse 87 He made coffee and read the funnies. C. adv. regional and colloquial. In an odd or peculiar manner, strangely. Cf. funnily adv. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > unconformity > abnormality > [adverb] > oddly odd1603 oddlya1616 quirkishly1673 queerly1698 singularly1752 quarely1805 rumly1819 funnily1837 peculiarly1847 funny1852 rummily1891 quirkily1926 off1966 1852 C. M. Yonge Two Guardians iv. 58 They speak so funny, I can't hardly make them out. 1884 M. C. J. Leith From over Water xiii. 107 ‘Furriner Tony’ folks allers called he. I mind he spoke funny. 1922 ‘R. Crompton’ Just—William i. 19 ‘I'm not talkin' funny,’ said William in the same husky voice, ‘I can't help talkin' like this.’ 1942 E. Ferber Saratoga Trunk (new ed.) vii. 123 I can't help seeing they kind of look at you funny. 1977 J. D. MacDonald Condominium i. 12 There are ripples in the west service court..and his service bounces funny. 1997 ‘Q’ Deadmeat 269 Froggy was a big guy who walked funny. 2009 N. Reding Methland i. 34 People..are..acting funny. Phrases P1. funny-ha-ha adj. colloquial funny in the sense ‘amusing or comical’ (see sense A. 1), as distinguished from ‘strange or peculiar’ (see sense A. 3); cf. ha ha int.Usually used in collocation with funny-peculiar adj. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [adjective] > comical merryc1390 pleasant1553 comical1575 mowsome1596 zany1616 burlesque1656 humoursome1656 farce-like1681 foolish1691 farcical1715 amusive1727 farciful1731 funny1739 farcic1763 quizzical1785 quizzy1785 quizzish1792 rib-tickling1809 smileable1830 cocasse1868 priceless1907 skit1914 funny-ha-ha1916 gas1955 1916 Alpha Phi Q. June 249 The Mount Holyoke girls inquire as to an experience. ‘Was it funny, peculiar, or funny, ha! ha!?’. 1955 M. McCarthy Charmed Life (1956) iii. 58 His art-school training rendered him funny ha-ha to the cognoscenti. 2016 Herald (S. Afr.) (Nexis) 13 Jan. The funny part wasn't ‘funny-ha-ha’, but rather ‘funny peculiar’. funny-peculiar adj. colloquial funny in the sense ‘strange or peculiar’ (see sense A. 3), as distinguished from ‘amusing or comical’ (see sense A. 1).Usually used in collocation with funny-ha-ha adj. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > unconformity > abnormality > [adjective] > odd quaintc1325 awkc1440 queer?a1513 odd1578 quaintish1594 odd-conceiteda1616 odd-ceited1652 whimsical1675 singulara1684 eccentric1685 oddish1705 rummish1709 comical1713 odd-like1718 rum1750 queerish1775 funny1793 quare1805 rummy1828 kinky1844 quirkish1848 quirky1873 odd-gates1906 funny-peculiar1916 antrin1925 off-brand1929 fanciful- 1916 Alpha Phi Q. June 249 The Mount Holyoke girls inquire as to an experience. ‘Was it funny, peculiar, or funny, ha! ha!?’. 1970 ‘D. Shannon’ Unexpected Death (1971) ii. 24 He thought the blonde was rather funny..in the sense of funny-peculiar. 2015 Cape Argus (Nexis) 10 Oct. (Entertainment section) 12 Pinelands is a funny place (funny peculiar, not funny ha ha). P2. very funny: used ironically or sarcastically to indicate that the speaker does not share another's amusement. ΚΠ 1882 E. Thompson Figures of Hell 151 You call it a ‘gin-mill’. Very funny. Keep out of it, or somebody will call you a gin-miller. 1917 Chambers's Jrnl. Apr. 290/1 ‘Oh, very funny!’ said Mr Porson furiously; ‘very funny, I have no doubt! But let me tell you, sir, I consider your conduct outrageous!’ 1975 Pocono (Stroudsburg, Pa.) Record 23 Aug. 3/1 ‘Don't you believe all pornography should be burned?’ ‘Why, because it's hot stuff..?’ ‘Very funny. Don't you know these books are written to destroy America?’ 1998 D. Hecht Skull Session ii. l. 314 Very funny, asshole. You are a regular Jerry Lewis, so help me. 2012 C. L. Shultz Spellcaster 201 Very funny, Emma. I thought you were being serious... Don't screw with my head. P3. a. In phrases with negative constructions, as it's not funny, there's nothing funny about ——, emphasizing that something is serious, or should be taken seriously.Cf. no laughing matter at laughing n. Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1883 Lebanon (Indiana) Patriot 21 June There is nothing funny about being burned out of ‘house and home’. 1886 J. K. Jerome Idle Thoughts 33 It isn't funny to be shabby and to be ashamed of your address. 1905 Outlook 27 May 223/2 Don't throw away your money like this. It isn't funny to be starving. 1952 M. Harris City of Discontent i. ii. 58 It is a very serious matter and not in the least bit funny. 1983 A. Bleasdale Boys from Blackstuff iii. 206 It's not funny. It's not friggin' funny. I've had enough of that ‘if you don't laugh you'll cry’. I've heard it for years. 2006 K. Long Queen Mum xviii. 298 I don't want to fire up my emails and get a load of offers from strangers to wee on me... No, it's not funny. b. colloquial (chiefly U.S.). to be so —— it isn't funny and variants: used to express that something is an extreme or incredible case. Cf. sense Phrases 3a.Cf. to be so —— it isn't true at true adj., n., adv., and int. Phrases 1f. ΚΠ 1930 Santa Fe Mag. Mar. 56/1 He's been seasick so many times at sea that it isn't even funny. 1945 N.Y. Amsterdam News 21 July a1/4 The Navy is so far out in front of the Army it isn't funny. 1958 J. Kerouac Let. 13 Jan. in Sel. Lett. 1957–69 (1999) 102 I have invented so many new words it's not funny. 1974 ‘P. Mann’ Dog Day Afternoon (1975) xx. 175 He's so screwed-up it isn't funny. 1980 Skanner (Electronic ed.) 27 Aug. 2 [The agreement] removed the power so far from the parents it wasn't funny. 2014 Grimsby Tel. (Nexis) 19 Aug. 35 So out of touch it's not even funny. Compounds C1. Complementary (chiefly in sense A. 3) as funny-smelling, funny-sounding, funny-tasting, etc. Cf. funny-looking adj. at Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1866 Daily Evening Bull. (San Francisco) 22 Sept. Funny-sounding drums. 1880 Boys of Eng. 10 Feb. 247/3 It's funny tasting stuff, and has a burning in the mouth. 1932 Illustr. London News 14 May 813/1 Regard them as big, funny-smelling animals. 1979 Bluefield (W. Va.) Daily Tel. 22 Aug. 31/1 This is a case of stretching a funny-seeming idea too thin. 1989 J. Sullivan Only Fools & Horses (2000) II. 6th Ser. Episode 1. 27/1 I wasn't drinking, in fact I was on some very trendy funny-tasting trendy water. 2014 Jerusalem Post (Nexis) 25 Apr. 14 Many funny-sounding words have been lovingly adopted from Yiddish into the English language. C2. funny car n. originally and chiefly U.S. a drag racing vehicle having a modified shortened wheelbase and, typically, a hinged body which may be raised at one end to expose the engine, chassis, etc. ΚΠ 1965 Daily Mail (Hagerstown, Maryland) 29 Apr. (Sports section) 33/3 For the first time anywhere on the East Coast this year, we will have Phil Bonners' '65 Mustang running against the ‘funny cars’ '65 Dodges! 1966 Valley News (Van Nuys, Calif.) 12 June 49 a/8 Because of changes in wheel base and tire size, which gives them a rather odd appearance drag racing enthusiasts immediately dubbed them ‘funny cars’. 1981 Pop. Hot Rodding Feb. 56/1 This month's gallery of mayhem is dedicated to the corps of Funny Cars and fearless drivers across the U.S.A. 2004 N.Y. Times 8 Aug. 25/2 New Jersey's premier home to dragsters, funny cars, jet cars and the rest. ΚΠ 1904 Wisconsin State Jrnl. 17 Aug. 3/2 We all laughed until the tears ran down our faces... He did dish up a little funny dope one time. 1911 Daily Northwestern (Oshkosh, Wiscosin) 3 June 12/2 Van Syckle [sc. an umpire] pulled such a bunch of funny dope. 1922 Santa Fe New Mexican 7 Feb. 4/2 Write us some of that funny dope. funny column n. originally and chiefly U.S. a column in a newspaper or magazine containing humorous anecdotes, jokes, illustrations, etc. ΚΠ 1849 Western Jrnl. Med. & Surg. 4 334 Matter which would have appeared to more advantage in the ‘Funny’ column of a country newspaper, than in a sober treatise of Practical Medicine. 1913 Fort Wayne (Indiana) News 25 Aug. 1/4 An association composed of men who write the funny columns. 2015 Guardian (Nexis) 25 June It is a great thrill to be published, either in or out of the funny column. funny face n. humorous (a) an amusing or humorously grotesque facial expression; only in to make (also pull) a funny face; cf. face n. Phrases 2; (b) an affectionate form of address, esp. to a lover or friend. ΚΠ 1836 Knickerbocker Feb. 161 You made such funny faces, I couldn't hold from laughing. 1894 S. Vane in Funny-folks 31 Mar. 7/2 Hullo, funny face! 1930 D. L. Sayers & ‘R. Eustace’ Documents in Case 38 Ever and ever yours, funny-face, old dear. I'd like to see your cheery grin now and again. 1991 J. Connor Distortions 58 Anna..pulled a funny face at the girl, which made her giggle more. 2011 B. J. Haynes Victoria's Park xxvi. 163 ‘Oh hi Funny Face!’ he said. funny farm n. slang (chiefly depreciative) a psychiatric hospital.Now often regarded as potentially offensive. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > places for the sick or injured > [noun] > hospital or infirmary > hospital for the mentally ill bedlam-house1525 dull-house1622 madhouse1649 bedlam1663 lunatic hospital1762 asylum1776 retreat1796 lunatic house1813 lunatic asylum1828 maison de santé1843 idiot asylum1848 rat house1854 bughouse1887 Colney Hatch1891 booby hatch1896 mental hospital1898 booby house1900 nut factory1900 nut collegec1906 nuthouse1906 monkey house1910 booby-hutch1914 nuttery1915 loony bin1919 nut hatch1928 silly house1930 bin1938 snake-pit1947 funny farm1950 1950 F. B. Gilbreth & E. G. Carey Belles on their Toes iv. 39 I thought maybe it was Overbrook [sc. the name of a psychiatric hospital in New Jersey]. You know, the Funny Farm. 1963 J. N. Harris Weird World Wes Beattie v. 61 Before Baldwin Ogilvy agrees to locking his client away in the funny farm, he might like to investigate the whole bang shoot. 2002 Daily Record (Glasgow) (Nexis) 2 Mar. 15 By the end of the week the only place he's moving to is the funny farm. We shouldn't be so glib. funny-looking adj. (a) having a comic appearance; (b) strange, peculiar, or odd-looking. ΚΠ 1824 Morning Post 8 May 3/4 A funny looking little old man. 1895 ‘M. E. Francis’ Frieze & Fustian 283 ‘Yon's a funny-lookin' lass. Let's chase her!’ 1932 French Rev. 5 271 Ugly gas jets, and funny looking stoves..are characteristic features of the class-rooms. 1985 ‘W. Tinasky’ Let. 8 May (1996) 44/1 Why wasn't I invited..? Because I'm old and poor and funny-looking? 2016 Times (Nexis) 13 Aug. The crowds surge forward to pat the camels as they parade proudly past. ‘They're funny looking,’ giggles a young girl. funny man n. a male comic, comedian, or clown. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > performance of jester or comedian > [noun] > jester or comedian jugglerc1175 foolc1300 jangler1303 fool sagec1330 ribald1340 ape-ward1362 japer1377 sage fool1377 harlotc1390 disporter?a1475 jocular?a1475 joculatora1500 jester?1518 idiot1526 scoffer1530 sporter1531 dizzardc1540 vice1552 antic1564 bauble-bearer1568 scoggin1579 buffoon1584 pleasant1595 zany1596 baladine1599 clown1600 fiddle1600 mimic1601 ape-carrier1615 mime1616 mime-man1631 merry man1648 tomfool1650 pickle-herring1656 badine1670 puddingc1675 merry-andrew1677 mimical1688 Tom Tram1688 Monaghan1689 pickled herring1711 ethologist1727 court-foola1797 Tom1817 mimer1819 fun-maker1835 funny man1839 mimester1846 comic1857 comedian1860 jokesman1882 comique1886 Joey1896 tummler1938 alternative comedian1981 Andrew- the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > jest or pleasantry > one who jests or jokes > professional japer1377 sage fool1377 harlotc1390 jocular?a1475 joculatora1500 jester?1518 bauble-bearer1568 buffoon1584 merry-andrew1677 court-foola1797 fun-maker1835 funny man1839 jokesman1882 1839 Odd Fellow 5 Oct. 157/2 After this comes a scene between the already known funny man and his sweetheart. 1935 Steubenville (Ohio) Herald-Star 3 Apr. 8/3 Even though their father may be the world's chief funny man, the two sons of Charlie Chaplin think some other fellows, also are funny. 2015 Milton Keynes Citizen (Nexis) 1 Nov. Clown around with Circus Starr's resident funnyman Chico Rico. funny paper n. North American a newspaper or magazine (or a separate section of one) dedicated to humorous anecdotes, jokes, illustrations, etc., spec. a section of a newspaper devoted to comic strips; cf. sense B. 2b. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journal > newspaper > [noun] > other types of newspaper gazette1607 contemporary1670 packet1678 exchange1798 funny paper1837 blanket sheet1839 broadsheet1840 special1861 cocoa press1907 bladder1936 regional1958 electronic paper1967 free1982 1837 Metrop. Mag. Mar. 249 A little innocent mirth for the entertainment of the readers of the ‘funny papers’. 1883 Lebanon (Indiana) Patriot 21 June His funny paper, The Georgia Major, was in the hands of the sheriff. 1986 M. T. Inge in D. Fowler & A. J. Abadie Faulkner & Humor 153 There is evidence that William Faulkner—himself once an aspiring cartoonist—had a fondness for the funny papers. 2006 L. Austin Woman's Place 11 The boys sprawled on the floor with the family dog and the funny papers. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > variety, etc. > performers in variety, etc. > [noun] > ship's concert party funny party1904 1904 G. R. Parker Comm. of H.M.S. Implacable 86 The decks had been decorated fore and aft, and the ‘funny party’ had mustered on a small platform on the stokers' mess-deck and gave an impromptu concert. 1917 ‘Taffrail’ Sub vii. 178 Once a year came the squadron regatta and sports, while at intervals our ‘Funny Party’, or pierrot troupe, gave an entertainment. Derivatives ˈfunnyism n. a joke or witticism. ΚΠ 1839 C. Fox Jrnl. 3 Apr. in Mem. Old Friends (1882) 37 His stories and funnyisms of all descriptions. 1901 Cedar Rapids (Iowa) Republican 2 Feb. 4/4 Sometimes it takes a funnyism a long time to filter through his risibilities. 2003 S. Suberman When It was our War vii. 177 Paul was also very funny, though his funnyisms were not what I was accustomed to. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.11779adj.n.2adv.1739 |
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