单词 | laugh |
释义 | laughn. 1. An instance of laughing; a burst of laughter. Also: a person's characteristic manner of laughing. Also figurative.belly, canine, holy, horse-laugh, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > [noun] > instance of laughterOE laugh1592 larf1836 yock1938 1592 S. Daniel Complaynt of Rosamond in Delia sig. I2 What women knowes it not I feare too much How blisse or bale lyes in theyr laugh or lowre? 1616 B. Jonson Entertainm. at Highgate 249 in Wks. I Goe to, little blushet, for this, anan, Yow'le steale forth a laugh in the shade of your fan. 1670 W. Annand Pater Noster v. 263 Philemon died in a laugh. 1713 R. Steele in Guardian 14 Apr. 1/1 The Laugh of Men of Wit is for the most part but a faint constrained kind of Half-Laugh. 1792 S. Rogers Pleasures Mem. i. 33 The heart's light laugh pursued the circling jest. 1811 J. Austen Sense & Sensibility III. vi. 116 Elinor could have forgiven everything but her laugh . View more context for this quotation 1834 Leigh Hunt's London Jrnl. 9 Apr. 9/1 When she stooped..over the tinder-box on a cold morning, and rejoiced to see the first laugh of the fire. 1857 C. H. Spurgeon New Park St. Pulpit II. 131 It is a figment and a fiction, a laugh and a dream. 1937 H. Jennings et al. May 12th Mass-observ. Day-surv. i. iii. 237 There is a pandemonium of noise, shouts, laughs and songs. 1952 ‘E. Ferrars’ Alibi for Witch i. 7 Marguerite laughed, a deep, throaty laugh. 1987 D. Wigoder Images of Destr. ii. 26 His boisterous laugh and friendly smiles often deceived us into believing that his feelings..were paternal and sympathetic. 2004 Cosmo Girl Aug. 95/2 Always up for a party and not afraid to offend anyone in the name of getting a laugh. 2. Laughter; inclination to laugh. Frequently in full of laugh. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > [noun] laughtereOE laughingc1325 laugh1673 1673 E. Hickeringill Gregory 203 It is the seat of laughter, always while you live, so much spleen, so much laugh. 1690 J. Crowne Eng. Frier v. 45 Oh I'me full of laugh, and must give it some vent. 1694 W. Congreve Double-dealer iii. i. 37 You are never pleased but when we are all upon the broad grin; all laugh and no Company. 1703 Poems on Affairs of State II. 159 His Face full oft of Laugh and Humour is full. 1768 O. Goldsmith Good Natur'd Man i. 11 Do you find jest, and I'll find laugh, I promise you. 1825 W. R. Grenville Forty Years in World (ed. 2) II. i. 4 I have frequently seen crowds of Hindoos..commixed as in our village scenes, and equally full of laugh, fun, and life. 1891 S. J. Duncan Amer. Girl in London 191 Mr. Pratte had very blue eyes with a great deal of laugh in them. 1906 Harper's Mag. Feb. 455/2 ‘Yes siree,’ Hill said, so full of laugh he couldn't hardly talk plain; ‘that's just who she was!’ 1958 G. Corso Let. in Accidental Autobiogr. (2003) 155 Aren't any of you afraid of seriousness? I am. But I'm never afraid of laugh. 3. a. A cause of laughter; a joke. In later use frequently ironic, as that's a laugh, what a laugh, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > that which causes or is subject of laughter laughterOE laughing game1530 laughing matter1549 laugh1689 scream1888 shriek1930 giggle1936 hoot1942 crack-up1961 laugher1973 1689 R. Gould Poems 305 Thus Error, in its rise, I strove to quash, And where I spar'd the laugh, I gave the lash. 1712 Spectator No. 279. 161 I remember but one Laugh in the whole Æneid, which rises in the Fifth Book upon Monœtes. 1819 C. Felch Let. 26 Aug. in Amer. Jrnl. Sci. (1920) 250 157 William. T. Malbone..seeing some appearance on the water, said—‘there is your Sea Serpent,’ meaning it as a laugh on me, for believing in its existence. 1895 G. B. Shaw in Sat. Rev. 2 Mar. 281/2 The piece contained three or four ‘laughs’ which could not possibly have been explained or described at a dinner party. 1921 Motion Picture Mag. Oct. 21/2 There is unlimited room for the screen comedy of manners and for comedy that depends for its laughs upon the sheer power of clever situations. 1930 W. R. Burnett Iron Man i. 3 Ain't that a laugh!.. That guy's been sleeping for the last half-hour, and he says we're a lot of company. 1961 A. Wilson Old Men at Zoo i. 51 That's a laugh. When Leacock was head of the Aquarium, he did absolutely nothing. 1999 Elephant & Castle (Coventry Univ. Students' Union) Oct. 15/1 Take four guys who all vow to get laid before their Prom night and you get a film that's full of laughs! 2001 Independent 22 Mar. i. 7/3 ‘I was worried the snow would kill some of my lambs,’ said one farmer, swigging back a beer, ‘What a laugh. I am going to lose all of them, aren't I?’ b. Something entertaining, diverting, or enjoyable; a good time, a lark. Also: (in plural) fun, amusement. Cf. to do something for laughs (also a laugh) at Phrases 6. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > [noun] > source of amusement or entertainment mirtha1250 solacec1290 recreationc1400 esbatement1477 pastime1490 pastancea1500 passe-temps1542 entertainment1561 relief?1578 fancy1590 sport1598 abridgement1600 entertain1601 recreative1615 amusatory1618 nutsa1625 diverter1628 recreator1629 passatempo1632 amuser1724 fun1726 dissipation1733 resource1752 distraction1859 enlivening1859 good, clean fun1867 enlivenment1883 light relief1885 laugh1921 not one's scene1962 violon d'Ingres1963 1921 Physical Training Mar. 239 They certainly enjoyed themselves, for it [sc. the demonstration] was a laugh from start to finish. 1931 M. Hellinger Moon over Broadway xlvii. 234 Slip me another shot of belly grease and we'll all have laughs. 1975 A. Scher & C. Verrall 100+ Ideas for Drama v. 108 It should be a laugh on holiday with Geraldine, maybe they'll meet some boys. 1982 Cincinnati Mag. Dec. 74/3 The round [of golf] was a laugh for the Bengals, of course, a lark, a good deed. 1986 Times 27 Jan. 9/7 Going out to work isn't a load of laughs. 1997 Select June 115/2 If the movies teach us one thing it's that life in The Mob is a right laugh: loads of cocaine, expensive clobber, hours of matey patter. 4. a. A person regarded as an object of laughter or ridicule; a laughing stock. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > fact or condition of being mocked or ridiculed > [noun] > object of ridicule hethinga1340 japing-stickc1380 laughing stock?1518 mocking-stock1526 laughing game1530 jesting-stock1535 mockage1535 derision1539 sporting stocka1556 game1562 May game1569 scoffing-stock1571 playing stock1579 make-play1592 flouting-stock1593 sport1598 bauchle1600 jest1606 butt1607 make-sport1611 mocking1611 mirtha1616 laughing stakea1630 scoff1640 gaud1650 blota1657 make-mirth1656 ridicule1678 flout1708 sturgeon1708 laugh1710 ludibry1722 jestee1760 make-game1762 joke1791 laughee1808 laughing post1810 target1842 jest-word1843 Aunt Sally1859 monument1866 punchline1978 1710 D. Manley Mem. Europe I. iii. 289 If she had any other Art of pleasing him, he had best conceal it, lest he make himself the Laugh of those numerous Coxcombs. 1818 Ld. Byron Beppo xciv. 43 He oft became the laugh of them. 1865 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend I. ii. xiii. 288 Must you too begin to dispose of me in your mind..as soon as I had ceased to be the talk and the laugh of the town? 1920 E. Poole Blind (1921) ix. 160 ‘As you've got her now, she's a laugh,’ he said. ‘And the laughs will kill the piece.’ 1994 Chicago Sun-Times (Nexis) 19 Jan. 39 Oh yi-yi! I would have been the laugh of the town, partner, if I tried to insure it. b. colloquial. An amusing or entertaining person. Now chiefly British. ΚΠ 1921 Kodak Mag. Mar. 23/1 Eight finished acts were presented, including..Sam Kellman, Hebrew comedian, who was a laugh from start to finish. 1937 J. Steinbeck Of Mice & Men iii. 92 Old Susy's a laugh—always crackin' jokes. 1983 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 17 Dec. l1/4 In Ireland someone would say, ‘Oh, he's a good laugh,’ and that would be his credibility. 1995 A. Devlin Criminal Classes ii. 39 Mum's all right, she's a laugh. She'll come to gay bars with me. 2006 S. Townsend Queen Camilla 155 Prince Harry, who were a right laugh but were a proper ginga. 5. An animal call or cry which is suggestive of human laughter, esp. that of a hyena. ΚΠ 1735 tr. C.-P. J. de Crébillon Skimmer I. ii. xiv. 116 The Screech-Owl, seeing this, set up a frightful Laugh. 1810 Eclectic Rev. July 639 A person who is possessed with the passion of superciliousness, we are told, ‘can comprehend nothing but the laugh of the hyena’. 1845 L. Leichhardt Jrnl. Overland Exped. Austral. (1847) 234 I usually rise when I hear the merry laugh of the laughing-jackass. 1867 A. L. Adams Wanderings Naturalist India 114 We were startled one night by the unpleasant laugh of the fish-owl. 1943 Pacific Affairs 16 493 A mild protest might perhaps be entered against his description of the kookaburra's laugh as an ‘unearthly screech’. 1976 A. Delius Border ii. 309 A kind of yelp, like a hyena's laugh, but sort of muffled. 2004 Express (Nexis) 10 Jan. 51 I'd swap the sounds of cars and police sirens for the cry of a mourning dove, bellowing of a hippo or laugh of a hyena any day. Phrases P1. a. to turn the laugh upon (also on, against) a person: to turn the situation to a person's disadvantage, esp. by making him or her an object of ridicule. ΚΠ 1668 J. Glanvill Plus Ultra viii. 60 Experience turns the laugh upon the confident incredulity of the Scoffer. 1757 ‘L. Lively’ Merry Fellow I. 280 This unexpected answer turned the laugh upon the duke, who never after attempted to be witty on so serious a subject. 1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker I. 153 He..found no great difficulty in turning the laugh upon the aggressor. 1822 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Dec. 790/1 Sydney Smith has turned the laugh against the Bishop most triumphantly and guffawingly. 1857 M. Reid Young Yägers xxvii. 248 I'll turn the laugh upon the whole of them—that I shall. 1922 McClure's Mag. Apr. 16/3 I would turn the laugh on Sol Rosenblum and I would do it with the truth. 1994 A. Green Tennis, Anyone? 4 Priscilla. I'll do anything to get back at those guys who laughed at me. Dad. That's the spirit. Turn the laugh on them. b. to raise the laugh against: to make an object of ridicule. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > deride, ridicule, or mock [verb (transitive)] > laugh to scorn > cause laughter at someone to raise the laugh against1737 1737 Presbytery of Edinb.'s Reply Affair W. Wishart 66 Are the Gentlemen Lawyers serious in this Instance? Surely not: and therefore they must thereby raise the Laugh of their Readers against them. 1766 O. Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield I. vii. 61 This effectually raised the laugh against poor Moses. 1814 F. Burney Wanderer II. iv. xxxiv. 325 That, you know would raise the laugh against us all horridly. 1848 R. Blakey Hist. Philos. Mind (1850) III. xvi. 260 His chief aim was to raise the laugh against any thing he was disinclined to adopt or to investigate profoundly. 1918 W. L. Cross Hist. Henry Fielding III. xxxvi. 279 Subsequently he raised the laugh against the English Jacobites, against Foote and Dr. Hill and the tribe of Grub Street. 1922 Open Court June 371 It is on this point in particular that Jules Lemaître..raised the laugh against him. c. to have the laugh on a person and variants: to have a person at a disadvantage, esp. by making him or her an object of ridicule. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery or superiority over [verb (transitive)] > have or get (someone) at a disadvantage to have at avail1470 to catch, have, hold, take (one) at (a or the) vantagec1510 to gain of1548 to be to the forehand with1558 to have (take) on (in, at) the lurch1591 to get the sun of1598 to have (also get) a good hand against1600 to take (have, etc.) at a why-nota1612 to weather on or upon1707 to have the laugh on a person1767 to have a (or the) pull of (also over, on)1781 to get to windward of1783 to have the bulge on1841 to give points to1854 to get (have) the drop on1869 to hold over1872 to have an (or the) edge on1896 to get (also have) the goods on1903 to get (or have) the jump on1912 to have (got) by the balls1918 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > disadvantageously [phrase] > to the disadvantage of > someone is at a disadvantage to have the laugh on a person1767 the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > deride, ridicule, or mock [verb (transitive)] > laugh to scorn > find someone laughable to have the laugh on a person1767 1767 I. Bickerstaff Love in City ii. xii. 44 Well now my dear, you will have the laugh against them, at least. 1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. ii. 94 If I have had my laugh at them, they have had theirs at me. 1881 E. E. Frewer tr. E. Holub Seven Years S. Afr. II. iv. 80 Meriko had the laugh of me. 1909 J. London Let. 1 July (1966) 280 The laugh is on me. I confess to having been fooled by Mr. Harris's canard. 1949 W. S. Maugham Writer's Notebk. 329 Sometimes we die sitting quietly in an armchair over a whisky and soda... Then, I suppose, we have the laugh over those who..never rested till the end. 1966 ‘J. Hackston’ Father clears Out 18 She's got the laugh on me this time, all right. 2006 D. Grant Selling Art without Galleries 204 The laugh was on him, however, since the majority of the Old Masters he bought turned out to be fakes. P2. a. to have (also get) the laugh on one's side: to have the advantage over an opponent; to have the last laugh. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery, superiority, or advantage [verb (intransitive)] risec1175 to have the higher handa1225 to have the besta1393 bettera1400 vaila1400 to win or achieve a checka1400 surmount1400 prevaila1425 to have (also get) the better handa1470 to go away with it1489 to have the besta1500 to have (also get, etc.) the better (or worse) end of the staff1542 to have ita1616 to have (also get) the laugh on one's side1672 top1718 beat1744 to get (also have) the right end of the stick1817 to have the best of1846 to go one better1856 1672 J. Lacy Old Troop v. i. 57 Now the laugh is on our side, Gentlemen. c1712 J. Swift Hints Ess. Conversat. in Wks. (1765) XIII. 257 Singling out a weak adversary, getting the laugh on his side, and then carrying all before him. 1760 ‘C. Townly’ Courtezans Pref. We married Men have the Laugh on our Side. 1847 F. Marryat Children of New Forest I. v. 94 You've beat us..and have the laugh on your side now. 1890 Fores's Sporting Notes & Sketches 6 15 I kept quiet and didn't go blabbing and bucking about my horse, and I think now I've got the laugh on my side! 1904 P. H. G. Powell-Cotton In Unknown Afr. xxii. 300 When pursued, they disappeared off the face of the earth,..and, for the time being, had the laugh on their side. 1925 E. K. Chambers Shakespeare 168 In the wit-encounters of Eastcheap, Falstaff always came out on top, with the laugh on his side. 1984 J. Kleinman in R. L. Perkins Two Ages ix. 176 Ehrengard, the seducer's intended victim, ends by having the laugh on her side. b. to have a laugh: to laugh; to have a good time, enjoy oneself; (later also) to joke, to joke around. ΚΠ 1698 T. Dilke Pretenders v. 42 With all my heart, my Lord, say what you will, I will have a laugh at your service. 1728 J. Oldmixon Bouhours' Arts Logick & Rhetorick ii. 132 You have had a laugh once in six Month's Time. 1736 J. Gyles Mem. Odd Adventures 15 I never heard that the Indians understood the Occasion of the Fright, but James and I had many a private Laugh about it. 1863 H. Edgar Jrnl. 3 May in Contrib. Hist. Soc. Montana (1900) III. 133 Around and around that bush we went... We had a good laugh over our cake walk. 1953 Changing Times May 48/3 We have to have a laugh now and then in these ever ‘changing times’ we now live in. 1989 Q. Bradley & M. Foster in C. Itzin Pornography (1993) i. 44 We have a laugh, have some wine and a look at the products. 1997 New Musical Express 20 Sept. 40/2 Little monkey. English as Yorkshire pud. Always having a laugh. 2003 R. Gervais & S. Merchant Office: Scripts 2nd Ser. Episode 2. 73 You're having a laugh, saying that! What's so good about Swindon? Neil? 2008 Asiana Summer 115 No need to get heavy about it, let's just have a laugh, eh? c. to have the last laugh and variants: to be vindicated after being the subject of ridicule, derision, or scepticism. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > succeed or be a success [verb (intransitive)] > achieve success (of persons) > be successful in the end to have the last laugh1822 1822 G. C. tr. J.-B. Louvet de Couvray Amours Chevalier de Faublas IV. 208 I question who will have the last laugh, M. de Rosambert; for let me tell you, I don't like to be turned into ridicule. 1886 J. M. Morton Taken from French in Comediettas & Farces 145 Lady F. Well, I confess you have the best of the game. Sir F. And the last laugh! 1937 G. Gershwin & I. Gershwin They All Laughed (song) 4 They laughed at us and how! But Ho, Ho, Ho! Who's got the last laugh now? 1968 D. Godfrey in R. Weaver Canad. Short Stories 2nd ser. 306 The Yankee came back about the end of August and we had to give him the last laugh. 1975 J. Aiken Voices in Empty House iv. 121 The dead really have the last laugh on the living. 2005 Independent 30 Sept. 7/1 Sir John Eliot Gardiner, who was dumped by a major record label,..has had the last laugh after his self-released album of Bach cantatas was named record of the year. P3. to raise a laugh: see raise v.1 10e. P4. on the laugh: laughing; highly amused. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > [adjective] > laughing laughingOE on the laugh1770 1770 E. Thompson Compositions J. Oldham I. p. iii When the tottering Pedagogue made his Entry, they were all on the Laugh. 1843 Foreign Q. Rev. 30 119 All the world is on the laugh, while the great Frenchman is playing his man off. 1847 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair (1848) vi. 53 ‘Of course you did,’ cried Osborne, still on the laugh. 1910 L. W. Gascoyne-Cecil Changing China (1913) xviii. 223 The Chinese coolie loves a jest, and once he is on the laugh he will..be much more inclined to attend to serious teaching. P5. Originally U.S. In later use frequently ironic. a. a laugh a minute: (a source of) frequent laughter or amusement. ΚΠ 1883 Daily Chron. (Marshall, Mich.) 6 Sept. 1/2 (advt.) First show this season and a laugh a minute. 1935 Hammond (Indiana) Times 31 Oct. 16/4 This racy comedy, which supplies a laugh a minute in the typical Runyonesque dialogue. 1968 Times 5 Oct. 19/4 Often what causes everyone the most misery in the making comes out a laugh a minute on the screen. 1996 ‘E. Lathen’ Brewing up Storm (1998) i. 3 This is going to be one helluva case. Even the preliminary hearing is a laugh a minute. 2008 D. Mamet in Village Voice Mar. 12–18 19/2 The play, while being a laugh a minute, is, when it's at home, a disputation between reason and faith. b. attributive. laugh-a-minute: very funny, hilarious. ΚΠ 1917 Portsmouth (New Hampsh.) Herald 10 May 5/2 (advt.) Tonight—the laugh-a-minute show... ‘The Two Recruits’. 1970 G. Chapman et al. Monty Python's Flying Circus (1989) II. xxxviii. 227 The kooky oddball laugh-a-minute fun-a-plenty world of unnatural sexual practices. 1994 United Church Observer Oct. 52/1 (advt.) Laugh a minute, zany story lines with great original music. 2002 Whisky Mag. Aug. 56/1 Those laugh-a-minute bureaucrats of Brussels said ‘RIP duty free’ back in 1999. P6. to do something for laughs (also a laugh): to do something just for fun, for sport, or ‘for the hell of it’. ΚΠ 1939 Charleston (W. Va.) Gaz. 13 Jan. 4/2 (advt.) They're in for life..but they only stay in for laughs! 1945 H. Brown Artie Greengroin 182 Some day that mess sergeant is going to fill the Spam full of arsenic and knock off the whole company for a laugh. 1962 Billboard Music Week 1 Sept. 49/3 Arnold would solidify his impression on the owner by bringing along an antique phonograph record ‘just for laughs’. 2005 E. Morrison Last Bk. you Read 1 I filled in their dumb-assed personality profile for a laugh. Compounds C1. General attributive, appositive, and objective, as laugh-compelling, laugh machine, laugh-shriek, etc. ΚΠ 1782 J. Elphinston tr. Martial Epigrams vi. iii. viii. 290 Humor's ev'ry son eschew, And the laugh-compelling crew. 1834 H. Caunter in Oriental Ann. xiv. 187 The shrill laugh-shriek of the jackal. 1852 G. A. Sala in Housh. Words 18 Sept. 8/1 He will throw his huge grotesque laugh-provoking limbs on a stool. 1865 Cornhill Mag. July 35 The West-country peasant ages ago called it [sc. the woodpecker] the ‘yaffingale’, that is, the laugh-singer. 1930 Punch 2 Apr. 365 Talkie-producers..arrange what are termed ‘laugh-gaps’ in order that the voices of the performers may not be drowned by applause. 1957 P. G. Wodehouse Over Seventy xvi. 154 Somebody has invented what is known as a laugh machine which can produce completely artificial laughter. 1984 Listener 21 June 35/4 Bogey as a vampire zombie is the great laugh-getter of the week. 2000 S. Bellow Ravelstein 223 So when I made my remark about the pictures, Ravelstein had given me his explosive laugh-stammer ‘Har har’. C2. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > [noun] > family Columbidae > member of genus Streptopelia > streptopelia senegalensis (laughing dove) laugher1735 laugh-dove1755 laughing dove1814 1755 Man No. 6. 1 The cry of the laugh-dove comes the nearest to it [sc. laughter in man] in tone and shake. laugh line n. (a) (usually in plural) = laughter line n. at laughter n.1 Compounds 2; (b) (in a play, film, or other entertainment) a line intended to make the audience laugh. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > skin > textures or states of skin > [noun] > wrinkle rimpleeOE rivellingOE rivelc1325 crow's footc1374 frounce1390 wrinklea1400 frumplec1440 freckle1519 line1538 lirkc1540 shrivel1547 plait1574 furrow1589 trench1594 crowfoot1614 seam1765 thought-line1858 laughter line1867 laugh line1913 smile-line1921 worry lines1972 society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > words spoken by actors > types of cue1553 anteloquy1623 aside1728 catchword1755 side soliloquy1842 gag1847 gravy1864 fluff1891 laugh line1913 rhubarb1919 curtain line1939 walla1949 1913 E. Ferber Roast Beef Medium x. 264 Up went the corners of her mouth! Out popped her dimples! The laugh-lines appeared at the corners of her eyes. 1925 T. H. Dickinson Playwrights of New Amer. Theatre 232 The source of his comedy is always an inner essence and not an artificial agglomeration of laugh lines and sure-fire situations. 2001 J. Weiner Good in Bed iii. xiv. 239 His full lips were bracketed by deep laugh lines. 2001 Chicago Tribune 3 Dec. ii. 2/1 David Pasquesi..is extraordinary here, turning the simple question ‘Where's the phone?’ into a huge laugh line. laugh-maker n. a person who makes others laugh. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > humour > humorist humorist1600 laugh-maker1827 1827 W. Kitchiner Traveller's Oracle I. 63 Our Superlative Laugh-maker, O'Keefe. 1949 L. Morris Not so Long Ago 99 A misadventure taught him one of the camera tricks that he was soon to exploit as a laugh-maker. 2003 H. Y. Sharada Prasad Bk. I won't be writing & Other Ess. xlv. 230 A true laugh-maker has to be versatile. laugh meter n. any of various devices used to measure or indicate the volume (or another quality) of laughter, and hence to gauge the humour of a performance, joke, etc.; also figurative; cf. laugh-o-meter n. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > [noun] > device for measuring laughter laugh-o-meter1907 laugh meter1910 1910 N.-Y. Tribune 25 Sept. v. 7/5 (advt.) The laugh meter rings the bell on every line. 1919 Olean (N.Y.) Evening Herald 2 June 4/3 (advt.) Taylor Holmes will make your laugh meter register to its capacity in ‘Taxi’. 1960 Spectator 28 Oct. 655/3 Managers whose henchmen have sat through countless performances..with stop-watches and laugh-meters. 2007 J. Lipton Inside Inside vii. 150 They'd discovered that the heart monitor beeping over his head could function as a laugh meter, and, in a lively competition, were taking turns telling jokes to the agonized patient. laugh riot n. an extremely amusing or entertaining person or thing. ΚΠ 1911 New Brunswick (New Jersey) Times 6 Nov. 3/5 (advt.) Always a laugh riot. Joe Weston's ‘School Days’. 1987 J. Humphreys Rich in Love vi. 134 ‘They can name any problem, and I've got the answer.’.. ‘Sex can be cured?’ ‘You're a laugh riot.’ 2003 High Country News 3 Feb. 15/3 An advertising agency in New York must have thought its commercial for Metamucil, an over-the-counter laxative, was a laugh riot. laugh track n. a recording of audience laughter added to the soundtrack of a comedy programme; cf. canned laughter n. at canned adj. Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > a film > [noun] > sound track sound track1929 track1931 wild track1940 laugh track1952 premix1960 1952 Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 25 Dec. 34/2 TV sponsors and producers believe they have hit upon a device which will allow them to duck their responsibility for entertaining video viewers. It's called a ‘laugh track’. 1969 Punch 5 Feb. 193/3 The absence of a laugh track which would only foul up the pace. 2005 Daily Tel. 14 June 16/1 Americans prefer their TV comedies to be fast-paced, gag-driven and laden with obvious laugh tracks. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022). laughv.α. early Old English hliehan, early Old English hliehchan, early Old English hliehhan, Old English hlehhan, Old English hlichan (rare), Old English hlihan, Old English hlihcan (rare), Old English hlihchan (rare), Old English hlihgan (rare), Old English hlihhan, Old English hlychan (rare), Old English hlyhhan, Old English hlyhð (3rd singular indicative), late Old English hlethað (plural indicative, perhaps transmission error), early Middle English hleihe, early Middle English leche, early Middle English leiche, early Middle English leige, Middle English leȝe, Middle English leȝȝe, Middle English lehȝe, Middle English leigȝe, Middle English leighȝe, Middle English leiȝe, Middle English leiȝhe, Middle English leihe, Middle English leyghe, Middle English leyȝe, Middle English leyȝhe, Middle English leyhe, Middle English lheȝe (south-eastern), Middle English lheȝȝe (south-eastern), Middle English liȝe, Middle English liȝhe, Middle English lihȝe, Middle English liyhe, Middle English lyghe, Middle English lyȝe, Middle English lyȝhe, Middle English lyhe; English regional (Lancashire) 1700s leigh, 1800s– laigh, 1800s– laith, 1800s– leygh; Irish English (Wexford) 1700s–1800s leigh, 1800s leeigh; N.E.D. (1902) also records a form Middle English leeȝe. β. Old English hlæhan (Anglian), late Old English hlahan, early Middle English lachȝe, early Middle English lahȝhenn ( Ormulum), early Middle English lahhe, early Middle English lahhȝhenn ( Ormulum), Middle English laghe, Middle English laghh, Middle English laghwe, Middle English laȝe, Middle English laȝhe, Middle English lah, Middle English lahȝe, Middle English laqwe, Middle English lauch (chiefly northern), Middle English laue, Middle English laughhe, Middle English laughwe, Middle English lauȝ, Middle English lauȝe, Middle English lauȝȝe, Middle English lauȝhe, Middle English lauȝwe, Middle English lauȝwhe, Middle English lauh, Middle English lauhe, Middle English lauhhe, Middle English lauhwe, Middle English lauhwhe, Middle English lawche, Middle English lawe, Middle English lawȝe, Middle English lawȝhe, Middle English lawhwe, Middle English lawwhe, Middle English laygh, Middle English lowe, Middle English–1500s lahe, Middle English–1500s lawgh, Middle English–1500s lawghe, Middle English–1500s lawhe, Middle English–1600s lagh, Middle English–1600s laughe, Middle English– laugh, 1500s laughen (archaic), 1500s laugth (3rd singular indicative), 1500s lawghen (archaic), 1500s loughe, 1500s–1600s laffe, 1600s lauff, 1600s lawf, 1600s loffe, 1800s– laff (regional); English regional 1800s laaf, 1800s– laf, 1800s– lafe, 1800s– lof, 1800s– loff, 1800s– lough; Scottish pre-1700 lache, pre-1700 lacht, pre-1700 lagh, pre-1700 lauche, pre-1700 laucht, pre-1700 laught, pre-1700 lawche, pre-1700 lawgh, pre-1700 1700s– lach, pre-1700 1700s– lauch, pre-1700 1700s– laugh, pre-1700 1700s– lawch, pre-1700 1900s– laich, 1800s lauwch, 1900s– laach (northern), 1900s– liach (Orkney); N.E.D. (1902) also records forms Middle English laȝwe, Middle English layhyn, Middle English loȝe, 1500s laȝe. γ. Scottish 1800s leugh, 1900s– leuch; U.S. regional 1900s– leuch. 2. Past tense. a. Strong.α. Old English hlog, Old English hloh, Middle English loch, Middle English loge, Middle English loghe, Middle English loȝ, Middle English loȝe, Middle English loh, Middle English lohȝ, Middle English lohu, Middle English lohw, Middle English looȝ, Middle English loowe, Middle English loowȝ, Middle English loughe, Middle English louȝ, Middle English louȝe, Middle English louȝh, Middle English louh, Middle English louhe, Middle English love, Middle English lovȝ, Middle English lowe, Middle English lowgȝ, Middle English lowgh, Middle English lowghe, Middle English lowght, Middle English lowȝ, Middle English lowȝe, Middle English lowȝhe, Middle English lowh, Middle English lowhe, Middle English–1500s lou, Middle English–1500s lough, Middle English–1500s low, Middle English (1600s Welsh English) logh, late Middle English louke (transmission error), late Middle English lowgehn (plural, transmission error), 1600s loffe; English regional (northern) 1800s lough (Lancashire); Scottish pre-1700 louch, pre-1700 lowch, pre-1700 lowche, 1800s lough. β. Middle English leuȝe, Middle English lew, Middle English lewȝ, Middle English lewȝe, Middle English lewh, Middle English lugh, Middle English lughe, 1500s leughe, 1500s lewgh, 1500s lewghe; English regional (northern) 1800s leugh (Northumberland), 1800s– leug (Cumberland); Scottish pre-1700 leuche, pre-1700 leughe, pre-1700 leuiche, pre-1700 leuth, pre-1700 lewche, pre-1700 lewgh, pre-1700 luch, pre-1700 luche, pre-1700 luich, pre-1700 luiche, pre-1700 luyche, pre-1700 1700s– leuch, pre-1700 1700s– leugh, pre-1700 1800s lewch, 1800s leuwch, 1800s– lyooch, 1900s– leough (Orkney), 1900s– lyuch; N.E.D. (1902) also records forms Scottish pre-1700 leuȝe, pre-1700 lugh, pre-1700 lughe. γ. Middle English leie, Middle English leigh. b. Weak.α. Middle English laged, Middle English laȝed, Middle English lahed, Middle English lauchet (north-west midlands), Middle English laugete, Middle English laughede, Middle English laughet, Middle English lauȝed, Middle English lauȝhede, Middle English lauhwede, Middle English lawede, Middle English lawghed, Middle English lawȝwede, Middle English lawhed, Middle English lawhede, Middle English lawhyd, Middle English loght, Middle English louched, Middle English–1500s lawght, Middle English–1700s laught, Middle English– laughed, late Middle English lacked (transmission error), 1500s laft, 1500s–1600s lought, 1600s larght, 1600s laugh't, 1600s laughd, 1800s lauched (Irish English (northern)); English regional 1800s loft (Cornwall), 1800s lowft (Lancashire); Scottish pre-1700 lauchit, pre-1700 laught, pre-1700 lawcht, pre-1700 1700s– laucht, 1800s– lauched, 1900s– lachit, 1900s– lauchet. β. Scottish pre-1700 leucht, pre-1700 leught, pre-1700 lucht, 1800s– leuched. γ. Middle English leiȝede, Middle English leyghed, 1800s– laithed (English regional (Lancashire)); N.E.D. (1902) also records a form Middle English leiȝide. 3. Past participle. a. Strong.α. late Middle English laughwen, late Middle English lawhen, late Middle English–1600s laughen, 1500s lawghen; Scottish pre-1700 lachin, pre-1700 laughen, pre-1700 lawchin, 1700s laughin, 1700s laughten, 1800s– lauchen, 1900s– laachen (Shetland). β. Scottish 1800s leuch, 1800s leuchin, 1900s– leuchen. b. Weak.α. late Middle English laughede, late Middle English lauȝed, late Middle English–1500s lawghed, late Middle English– laughed, 1500s laugyd, 1600s laffed, 1500s–1600s 1800s laught; Scottish pre-1700 lached, 1900s– laacht (Shetland), 1900s– lauched, 1900s– laucht. β. Scottish 1800s leugh't, 1900s– leuched, 1900s– leucht. See also larf v. 1. a. To make the spontaneous sounds and movements of the face and body usual in expressing joy, mirth, amusement, or (sometimes) derision; to have the same reaction in response to being tickled; to emit laughter. Also in extended use: to feel joy, mirth, amusement, or derision without such accompanying sounds and movements. (a) intransitive. Without construction. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > laugh [verb (intransitive)] laugheOE larf1832 hoot1926 yock1938 yock1938 eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xxvii. 187 Wa eow ðe nu hliehað, forðam ge sculon eft wepan. OE Ælfric Old Eng. Hexateuch: Gen. (Claud.) xviii. 15 Ða ætsoc Sarra: Ne hloh ic na... God cwæð þa: Nys hyt na swa, ac þu hloge. OE Prudentius Glosses (Boulogne 189) in H. D. Meritt Old Eng. Prudentius Glosses (1959) 22 [Pectora] rident : hlihcaþ. c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 5663 He wepeþþ ec forr alle þa Þatt lahȝhenn her wiþþ sinne. c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 8142 He warrþ swiþe bliþe þa, & toc to lahhȝhenn lhude. a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 127 (MED) Mann is swa blind ðat he farð to helle leiȝinde. ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 170 & þenne wið spredde armes leapeð lachȝinde to. c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) l. 2233 Þe king bigan somdel to lyhe, þo he hurde þis. c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 1582 Sche com wiþ adrink of main and louȝ. c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) l. 653 (MED) Þenne þe burde byhynde þe dor for busmar laȝed. a1425 (?c1350) Ywain & Gawain (1964) l. 3464 (MED) When he hir saw, ful fast he logh; Him liked it wele in his hert, Þat he saw hir so in quert. c1450 (c1386) G. Chaucer Legend Good Women (Fairf. 16) (1879) Prol. l. 93 Ryght so mowe ye oute of myn hert bringe Swich vois ryght as yow lyst to laughe or pleyn. 1481 W. Caxton tr. Hist. Reynard Fox (1970) 86 Ye lawhyd for ye were wel plesyd. c1500 (?a1475) Assembly of Gods (1896) l. 404 Pan gan to carpe Of hys lewde bagpype, whyche caused the company To lawe. 1585 C. Fetherston tr. J. Calvin Comm. Actes Apostles viii. 13. 189 The Epicures & Lucianists doe professe that they belieue, where as notwithstanding they laugh inwardly. 1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. i. 55 Then the whole Quire hould their hippes, and loffe. a1657 W. Mure Misc. Poems in Wks. (1898) I. ii. 88 Lauching to sie my trickling teirs doune go. 1676 T. Hobbes tr. Homer Iliads i. 561 And then the Gods laught all at once outright. 1728 A. Ramsay Anacreontic on Love 32 He leugh and with unsonsy jest, Cry'd, ‘Nibour, I'm right blyth in mind.’ 1754 Earl of Chatham Lett. to Nephew (1804) v. 35 It is generally better to smile than laugh out. 1839 E. W. Lane tr. Thousand & One Nights I. 98 The 'Efreet laughed, and, walking on before him, said, O fisherman, follow me. 1890 H. Caine Bondman I. x. 223 Then she laughed like a bell. 1923 R. Herrick Homely Lilla 68 She found herself laughing freely with the grape-pickers. 1961 B. Crump Hang on a Minute Mate 18 My mate reckoned he'd never laughed so much since his brother's pig-dogs got loose and followed him into the Waitawheta dance hall! 1992 Out Summer 24/1 There are very few authors publishing today who make us laugh out loud. 2005 J. Weiner Goodnight Nobody iii. 25 She'd told me her kids were named Tristan and Isolde, and I'd laughed. ΚΠ eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xxxiv. 231 Sua micle mede..sua we habbað ðæs hleahtres, ðonne we hliehað gligmonna unnyttes cræftes. c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. viii. l. 107 I shal..beloure þat I louȝ [a1425 Wales 733B lowgh, a1475 Harl. 3954 laughed, 1532 Digby love; c1450 Harl. 6041 belouȝ] er þeiȝ liflode me faile. (c) intransitive. With preposition (esp. at, over) indicating the object of laughter. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > laugh [verb (transitive)] > recall or repeat with laughter laugha1225 a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 57 Ðe woreld-mann lihtliche leicheð of ydelnesse ðe he isieð oðer iherð, al swa ðe gastliche mann..lihtliche wepð oðer sobbeð. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 7474 Þan king þuhte gomen inoh, for hire spæche he loh. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 2722 Sare..Herd þis word and lohu [Fairf. loghe, Trin. Cambr. lowȝe] þar-att. c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Reeve's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) Prol. l. 1 Whan folk hadde laughen at this nyce cas. c1450 C. d'Orleans Poems (1941) 174 (MED) He fel and had fortore His hose, at which fulle many of hem lough. 1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue ii. 226 Whereat they laugh't a good. 1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 65 He had the picture of a foole at the entrance,..laughing on an Urinall in his hand. 1739 E. Phillips Britons, strike Home 4 Ha, ha, ha! I cannot but laugh at the Oddity of Mr. Meanwell's Conceit. 1764 O. Goldsmith Traveller 2 Where all the ruddy family around Laugh at the jests. 1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto IV iv. 73 If I laugh at any mortal thing, 'Tis that I may not weep. 1880 ‘Mrs. Forrester’ Roy & Viola I. 7 Dreams, indeed, my dear!..I have not forgotten them: I often laugh heartily over them. 1920 E. Ferber Half Portions vi. 192 He laughed, admiringly, at that and said she was a card. 1966 J. Potts Footsteps on Stairs (1967) iii. 38 Hazel had to laugh, just at the sight of him up there on the step-stool. 2000 M. Barrowcliffe Girlfriend 44 iv. 118 We would go to Sainsbury's together only to laugh over the organic vegetables. 2002 G. Gordon in Writing Wrongs 65 Mrs Macrae laughs inwardly at the pronunciation of her name. b. intransitive poetic and literary. Of an inanimate object: to appear lively with movement, sound, or the play of light and colour, as if expressing joyous feeling. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > laugh [verb (intransitive)] > of inanimate objects laugha1398 a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xiv. l. 721 [For] fayrenesse and grene springynge þat is þerinne, it is yseyde þat meedes laghweþ. c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 636 Firy Phebus riseth vp so brighte That al the Orient. laugheth of the lighte. a1500 (a1400) Awntyrs Arthure (Douce) l. 162 (MED) My lere, [was] as þe lele, louched one highte [c1475 Ireland that lauchet so lyȝte]. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms lxv. 13 The valleys stonde so thicke with corne yt they laugh and synge. 1692 T. Fletcher Poems Several Occasions 41 If the Heavens laugh a while, From the Heav'ns I learn to smile. 1725 A. Pope tr. Homer Odyssey I. iii. 601 In the dazling goblet laughs the wine. 1785 W. Cowper Task vi. 817 The fruitful field Laughs with abundance. a1807 W. Wordsworth Prelude (1959) iv. 126 The Sea was laughing at a distance. 1841 N. Hawthorne Famous Old People i. 10 The wood-fire..laughs broadly through the room. 1875 H. W. Longfellow Masque of Pandora 12 The waters of a brook that run Limpid and laughing in the summer sun! 1922 F. S. Fitzgerald in Smart Set June 26/2 The leaves laughed in the sun and their laughter shook the trees. 2001 J. Macy Widening Circles viii. 90 On the day of our audience with the Dalai Lama the sun laughed from the snowpeaks and the glinting streams. c. intransitive. Of an animal, esp. a hyena: to call or cry in a manner suggestive of human laughter. ΚΠ 1765 Crit. Rev. 20 335 The ancients conveyed to the moderns a notion that the Hyæna could imitate a man's voice;..why may not the Hyæna laugh as well as speak? 1816 M. Betham Lay of Marie 215 At them the hyenas laugh; wolves grin with ravenous joy. 1880 T. W. Nutt Melbourne Palace Industry 15 Where clock-bird laughed and sweet wild flowers throve. 1930 W. M. Mann Wild Animals in & out of Zoo vii. 112 We could always make our spotted hyena..laugh by holding his meat an extra moment or two on the outside of the bars. 1943 C. E. Goode Bridge Party at Boyanup 25 A jackass laughed from a mountain ash near a sleeper cutter's camp. 1987 G. Turner Sea & Summer 111 In the silence a distant kookaburra laughed. 2006 Jerusalem Post (Nexis) 31 Mar. 30 Why do hyenas laugh? Why do zebras have stripes? 2. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > deride, ridicule, or mock [verb (transitive)] teleeOE laughOE bismerc1000 heascenc1000 hethec1175 scornc1175 hokera1225 betell?c1225 scorn?c1225 forhushc1275 to make scorn at, toc1320 boba1382 bemow1388 lakea1400 bobby14.. triflea1450 japec1450 mock?c1450 mowc1485 to make (a) mock at?a1500 to make mocks at?a1500 scrip?a1513 illude1516 delude1526 deride1530 louta1547 to toy with ——1549–62 flout1551 skirp1568 knack1570 to fart against1574 frump1577 bourd1593 geck?a1600 scout1605 subsannate1606 railly1612 explode1618 subsannea1620 dor1655 monkeya1658 to make an ass of (someone)1680 ridicule1680 banter1682 to run one's rig upon1735 fun1811 to get the run upon1843 play1891 to poke mullock at1901 razz1918 flaunt1923 to get (or give) the razoo1926 to bust (a person's) chops1953 wolf1966 pimp1968 the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > deride, ridicule, or mock [verb (transitive)] > laugh to scorn laugheOE laughOE bilauhOE to laugh to scorn (also bismer, hething, hoker)OE to laugh or take to scorninga1400 deride1530 outlaugh1605 smile1608 arride1612 fleer1622 irride1637 haw-haw1862 OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: Luke xxiii. 35 Deridebant illum principes : bismeredon uel hlogon hine ða aldormenn. OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 2nd Ser. (Cambr. Gg.3.28) xxxiii. 281 Hwæt ða apostoli ða hlogon þæra deofla leasunga. ?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) ii. met. i. l. 828 She [sc. Fortune] lauȝeþ and scorneþ þe wepyng of hem þe whiche she haþ maked wepe wiþ hir free wille [L. gemitus..quos fecit ridet]. a1560 W. Kennedy Passioun of Christ in J. A. W. Bennett Devotional Pieces (1955) 651 To eik his [sc. Christ's] wo, the moir thai leuch his pane. 1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Jan. 66 She..laughes the songes, that Colin Clout doth make. 1633 P. Fletcher Purple Island viii. xiv. 110 Just frights he laughs, all terrours counteth base. a1648 W. Percy Cuck-queanes & Cuckolds Errants (1824) iii. vii. 43 Now they be laughing the Gentleman, for it, furth his coate, all. b. intransitive. With at. To mock, deride; to make fun of. In early use also with †of, †on, †over, †upon.Also in prepositional passive. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > deride, ridicule, or mock [verb (transitive)] > laugh to scorn laugheOE laughOE bilauhOE to laugh to scorn (also bismer, hething, hoker)OE to laugh or take to scorninga1400 deride1530 outlaugh1605 smile1608 arride1612 fleer1622 irride1637 haw-haw1862 eOE (Mercian) Vespasian Psalter (1965) li. 6 (8) Uidebunt iusti et..super eum ridebunt : gesiað rehtwise &..ofer hine hlæhað [OE Lambeth Psalter hlihchað]. ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) i. l. 8674 Þan said þe kyng & on hym louh [a1450 Lamb. low], ‘It were þan grete ferly.’ R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Fire of Love 7 (MED) Of an innocentis payns þou laghys. c1450 (c1375) G. Chaucer Anelida & Arcite (Fairf. 16) (1878) l. 234 He laugheth at my peyne. 1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope ii. xii Of the euylle of other, men ought not to lawhe ne scorne. a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 55/1 He laughed vpon him, as though he would say, ye shal haue sone. 1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. xviijv A lighte and verye weake reason..& euen laughed at of the Romanes them selues. a1586 Peblis to Play in W. A. Craigie Maitland Folio MS (1919) I. 178 All þat luikit þame vpon leuche fast at þair array. 1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies i. i. 2 In his Commentaries vpon the Epistle to the Hebrewes, he doth laugh at those, which hold the heavens to be round. 1668 T. Shadwell Sullen Lovers Pref. The rejected Authors of our time, who when their Playes are damn'd, will strut, and huff it out, and laugh at the Ignorance of the Age. 1720 D. Defoe Mem. Cavalier 202 Our Major was..laughed at by the whole Army. 1787 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 214 How graceless Ham leugh at his Dad. 1805 R. Anderson Ballads in Cumberland Dial. 11 Far maist I leugh at Grizzy Brown. 1807 Salmagundi 20 Mar. 117 Giving parties to people who laugh at them. 1880 L. Stephen Alexander Pope iv. 89 Though Pope laughed at the advice, we might fancy that he took it to heart. 1913 G. Stratton-Porter Laddie xi. 340 I'll wager a strong young girl like the Princess will laugh at you for babying over her. 1966 Maclean's 2 May 50/4 I was constantly laughed at, pointed at and corrected. 1996 Minx Nov. 146/1 I can't stand the thought of them laughing at me behind my back. ΚΠ OE Old Eng. Martyrol. (Julius) 5 Apr. 50 He [sc. St Ambrose] sæde þæt he gesawe Crist selfne, ond þæt he him hloge to. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 9253 Ofte he hire lokede on..ofte he hire loh to, & makede hire letes. c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 903 The kok stod, and on him low. And þoute him stalworþe man ynow. a1350 in G. L. Brook Harley Lyrics (1968) 37 (MED) Þ[at] lussom, when heo on me loh, ybend wax eyþer breȝe. c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xi. l. 203 For-þi loue we as leue bretheren shal and vche man laughe vp other. a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 5061 She..laugheth on hym, and makith hym feeste. a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) l. 1092 (MED) For þe world laghes on man and smyles, Bot at þe last it him bygyles. a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1869) I. 150 Ȝif..þe world leiȝe to him in killynge of his enemyes. c1500 Sir Corneus in M. M. Furrow Ten 15th-cent. Comic Poems (1985) 283 (MED) The kyng..fast..lowȝhe þe erle vpon And bad he schuld be glad. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) 1 Esdras iv. 31 Yf she laughed vpon him, he laughed also: but yf she toke eny displeasure with him, the kynge was fayne to flater her, & to geue her good wordes, till he had gotten hir fauoure agayne. 1669 S. Pepys Diary 7 Jan. (1976) IX. 410 A bold merry slut [sc. Nell Gwyn], who lay laughing there upon people. 4. a. transitive. To say or express with a laugh; (also) to utter as a laugh. Chiefly with that-clause or direct speech as object.In quot. 1609 with out. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > laugh [verb (transitive)] > utter with laughter laugheOE the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > say in a particular manner [verb (transitive)] > with a sneer, laugh, etc. laugheOE simper1567 sneer1693 titter1787 chuckle out1820 snigger1857 sniff1859 smile1860 smirk1879 eOE Battle of Brunanburh (Parker) 47 Gelpan ne þorfte beorn blandenfeax bilgeslehtes, eald inwidda, ne Anlaf þy ma; mid heora herelafum hlehhan ne þorftun þæt heo beaduweorca beteran wurdun on campstede. 1609 W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida i. iii. 163 The large Achilles..laughes out a lowd applause. View more context for this quotation 1778 F. Burney Evelina III. xxi. 241 ‘He, he!’ faintly laughed Mr. Lovel. 1839 J. H. Ingraham Capt. Kyd I. iv. 130 ‘This is only the anteroom to it. Ha, ha!’ she laughed frightfully. 1844 E. B. Barrett Drama of Exile in Poems I. 85 For is all laughed in vain? 1857 C. Brontë Professor II. xxii. 134 ‘I wonder whether you'll be still out of place!’ he laughed, as mockingly, as heartlessly as Mephistopheles. 1917 R. H. Patterson Eve, Junior viii. 108 The hand that held the weapon trembled as a cur trembles at the voice of its master, and Carroll laughed his disdain. 1944 C. Beaton Diary 8 Nov. in Self Portrait with Friends (1979) xv. 158 He sat in profile and laughed that I should not make him look like Whistler's mother. 1986 J. Barnes Staring at Sun II. 126 ‘Can you lend me a nightdress?’ Rachel laughed that she didn't own one. 2002 C. Williams Sugar & Slate 98 ‘They call us Frosties,’ he laughs. b. transitive. With cognate object. To emit (a laugh or laughter). ΚΠ c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 96 Efter þire wordis, A lowde laȝter he loȝe. c1470 King Estmere l. 235 in D. Laing Early Sc. Metrical Tales (1889) 245 The ladye lough a loud laughter, As shee sate by the king. 1579 T. North tr. Plutarch Liues 890 They laughed a Sardonians laugh, not knowing how darkely his deedes had wrapt them in. c1650 Lord of Learne 215 in F. J. Furnivall Percy Folio (1867) I. 190 A loud laughter the Ladie lought. 1713 J. Floyer tr. Sibylline Oracles i. 9 You shall laugh the Sardonian Laughter when this thing shall come to pass. 1842 Ld. Tennyson Lady Clare in Poems (new ed.) II. 199 He laugh'd a laugh of merry scorn. 1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems xxxi. 14 Laugh out whatever laughter at the hearth rings clear. 1923 A. Huxley Antic Hay x. 150 He laughed a happy little laugh. 1968 A. K. Armah Beautyful Ones are not yet Born (1969) i. 6 The conductor laughed a crackling laugh. 2002 N. McDonell Twelve lv. 138 Theodore laughs a big wheezy laugh, like a bus kneeling to let a wheelchair passenger get on. 5. transitive. With complement. To bring (a person or (occasionally) thing) into a particular state or position by laughing. Frequently in to laugh (a person) out of it: to persuade (a person) out of a depressed or serious mood with laughter. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > laugh [verb (transitive)] > produce effect in by laughing laugha1387 the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > ignoring, disregard > ignore, disregard [verb (transitive)] > dismiss from consideration > with laughter laugha1387 to laugh out1566 to laugh away1590 to laugh over1627 to laugh off1676 the mind > emotion > pleasure > state of being consoled or relieved > be relieved of [verb (transitive)] > console or relieve > with laughter laugha1387 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 305 (MED) Þey haue an herbe..þat makeþ men laughe hem selue to deþ. a1529 J. Skelton Magnyfycence (1856) 57 Yes, yes, by my trouth, I holde the a grote, That I shall laughe the out of thy cote. 1577 N. Breton Wks. Young Wyt f. 37v With thousandes more that were to long to tell, but made me laugh my hart sore, I wot wel. a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) ii. i. 193 Will you laugh me asleepe, for I am very heauy. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) ii. ii. 126 Angels..who with our spleenes, Would all themselues laugh mortall. View more context for this quotation 1679 J. Goodman Penitent Pardoned (1713) ii. ii. 196 The company..laughed the cunning man out of countenance. 1702 R. Steele Funeral ii. 20 I Laugh her out of it, when she begins to Frown. c1712 J. Swift Hints Ess. Conversat. in Wks. (1765) XIII. 262 Love, honour, friendship, generosity,..under the name of fopperies, have been for some time laughed out of doors. 1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 321 Whom [has it] laughed into reform? 1838 J. C. Hare & A. W. Hare Guesses at Truth (ed. 2) 1st Ser. 327 Is there anybody living..who has not often been laught out of what he ought to have done, and laught into what he ought not to have done. 1863 C. C. Clarke Shakespeare-characters x. 268 A fellow who will joke and laugh the money out of your pocket. 1918 F. B. Young Crescent Moon v. 96 Eva tried to laugh him out of it, to make him ashamed of being afraid. 1926 D. Hammett in Black Mask Feb. 67/2 ‘You sell me out, you damned gorilla, and I'll—’ He laughed the threat out of being, his dark face young and careless again. 1954 J. Thompson Nothing Man vii. 74 You'd be laughed out of town if you tried to pin the job on one of your typical fall guys. 2002 Echoes May 28/4 This is an hour's non-stop ride of African and Latin percussion..and enough joy of life to have you laughing yourself to sleep. Phrases P1. Phrases. a. to laugh to scorn (also †bismer, †hething, †hoker): to deride, to ridicule.In Old English with genitive of person. In Middle English originally with dative of person; later apprehended as transitive with the person as object: cf. sense 5. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > deride, ridicule, or mock [verb (transitive)] > laugh to scorn laugheOE laughOE bilauhOE to laugh to scorn (also bismer, hething, hoker)OE to laugh or take to scorninga1400 deride1530 outlaugh1605 smile1608 arride1612 fleer1622 irride1637 haw-haw1862 OE Note on Old Test. Figures (Tiber. A.iii) in Anglia (1889) 11 2 He getælde his fæder noe..& his to bismere hloh. ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 197 Hwen ȝe habbeð hardi bi leaue. nulle ȝe buten lachȝen him lude to bismare. a1250 Wohunge ure Lauerd in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 283 (MED) Swete ihesu..ha..lahhen þe to hokere þer þu o rode hengest. c1350 How Good Wife taught her Daughter (Emmanuel) (1948) l. 15 (MED) Lau þou noȝt to scorn neiþer olde no ȝunge. c1390 in C. Horstmann Minor Poems Vernon MS (1892) i. 333 (MED) Alle wolle þei ful ȝare Lauhwhe þe to bisemare. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 15881 (MED) Þe feluns logh [Trin. Cambr. lowȝe] him til hething on ilk side, allas! a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 2028 He [sc. Cain] was vnkynde ynouȝe To scorne he his fadir louȝe. a1450 Seven Sages (Cambr. Dd.1.17) (1845) l. 1995 (MED) The clerkys..louhe to scorne the emperour. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms xxi[i]. 7 All they yt se me, laugh me to scorne. a1569 M. Coverdale Fruitful Lessons (1593) sig. Pv The wisest of all is laughed to scorne. 1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 96 They fell to teighing, and now they laugh you to skorne. 1671 G. Thomson Μισοχυμὶας Ἔλεγχου 15 He esteems this brave Experimental Philosopher, worthy to be laughed to scorn by every understanding Physician. 1738 J. Wesley Coll. Psalms & Hymns (new ed.) ii. iv The Lord..Shall..laugh to Scorn their furious Pride. 1778 F. Burney Let. 6–8 July in Early Jrnls. & Lett. F. Burney (1984) 45 This was a horrible Home stroke;..however, I found it was a mere random shot, &..I laughed it to scorn. a1839 W. M. Praed Poems (1864) II. 395 I laughed to scorn the elements—And chiefly those of Learning. 1866 W. D. Howells Venetian Life 306 This was too much, and we laughed him to scorn. 1900 Western Champion (Barcaldine) 28 Aug. 3/3 He had laughed me to scorn for drinking tea with milk. 1981 ‘Q. Crisp’ How to become Virgin v. 61 To me everyone is interesting who will talk about himself but, when I said this in Toronto, I was laughed to scorn by one of the city's drama critics. 2009 Africa News (Nexis) 18 May When we watch the amateur survivors on satellite television, we laugh them to scorn. b. to laugh one's fill: to laugh as much as one is able; to laugh heartily and at length. ΚΠ c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Miller's Tale (Ellesmere) (1870) l. 3722 Now hust and thou shalt laughen al thy fille. 1577 T. Kendall Flowers of Epigr. f. 27v Laugh if thou please: Yea laugh thy fill. 1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. i. 464 Such matter as will make you laugh your fill, if you have a laughing spleene. 1730 tr. N. Heinsius Life & Surprizing Adventures of Mirandor 98 When we are in a place where we may laugh our fill without fear. 1876 L. Campbell tr. Sophocles Ajax 14 Now even for pleasure thou mayst laugh thy fill. 1893 Harper's Mag. Mar. 621/2 I never allowed myself to laugh my fill when father and Sir Jasper were by, for fear of their displeasure. 1938 Slavonic & East European Rev. 16 537 When Watery Kuba had laughed his fill he wiped the tears out of his eyes. 2007 Brattleboro (Vermont) Reformer (Nexis) 6 Sept. Laugh your fill, eat some dark chocolate and go home feeling refreshed. c. laugh and lie down n. (also laugh and lay down) now historical a card game in which the object is to make pairs from the cards in one's hand and those on the table, a player unable to do this having to lay down his or her remaining cards; frequently used punningly with reference to sexual intercourse.For a detailed account of the rules see Francis Willughby's Book of Games (2003) 138-40. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > other card games > [noun] > others laugh and lie down1522 mack1548 decoyc1555 pinionc1557 to beat the knave out of doors1570 imperial1577 prima vista1587 loadum1591 flush1598 prime1598 thirty-perforce1599 gresco1605 hole1621 my sow's pigged1621 slam1621 fox-mine-host1622 whipperginnie1622 crimpa1637 hundred1636 pinache1641 sequence1653 lady's hole1658 quebas1668 art of memory1674 costly colours1674 penneech1674 plain dealing1674 wit and reason1680 comet1685 lansquenet1687 incertain1689 macham1689 uptails1694 quinze1714 hoc1730 commerce1732 matrimonya1743 tredrille1764 Tom come tickle me1769 tresette1785 snitch'ems1798 tontine1798 blind hazard1816 all fives1838 short cards1845 blind hookey1852 sixty-six1857 skin the lamb1864 brisque1870 handicap1870 manille1874 forty-five1875 slobberhannes1877 fifteen1884 Black Maria1885 slapjack1887 seven-and-a-half1895 pit1904 Russian Bank1915 red dog1919 fan-tan1923 Pelmanism1923 Slippery Sam1923 go fish1933 Russian Banker1937 racing demon1938 pit-a-pat1947 scopa1965 1522 J. Skelton Why come ye nat to Courte 928 Now nothynge but pay, pay, With, laughe and lay downe, Borowgh, cyte, and towne. 1591 J. Florio Second Frutes 67 What game doo you plaie at cards? At primero, at trump, at laugh and lie downe. 1594 J. Lyly Mother Bombie sig. Hv At laugh and lie downe, if they play, What Asse against the sport can bray? 1634 Noble Souldier i. sig. B2v Sorrow becomes me best. A suit of laugh and lye downe would weare better. a1672 F. Willughby Bk. of Games (2003) 138 From this laying downe of cards, & the rests laughing at him that lays them downe, comes the name Laugh & Ly Downe. 1713 Capt. Bland Northern Atalantis (ed. 2) 67 To any Game at Cards she'll not say nay, But Laugh and Lye down is her common play. 1764 T. Turner Diary 16 Nov. (1984) (modernized text) 309 We played some time at a game called ‘Laugh and lay down’. a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) Laugh-and-lay-down, a childish game at cards. 1855 H. R. Helper Land of Gold 169 Some of the tavern-loungers seat themselves around the table, to take a friendly game of euchre, whist, seven-up, laugh-and-lay-down,..or matrimony. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses 194 He will never..play victoriously the game of laugh and lie down. 2004 J. E. Fender Our Lives, our Fortunes 32 Until I played agin Daniel O'Buck,..I alus thought Laugh and Lie Down wus truly a game o' chance. d. to laugh up (also in) one's sleeve: to laugh to oneself; to nurse inward feelings of amusement or derision. [After post-classical Latin ridere in sinum (1555 in the passage translated in quot. 1560).] ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > types of laughter > laugh in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > laugh to oneself to laugh up (also in) one's sleeve1560 smudge1808 1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. lxiiij If I coueted nowe to auenge the iniuries that you haue done me, I myght laughe in my slyue [L. riderem in sinum]. 1609 W. M. Man in Moone sig. Fv Neuer laugh in your sleeue, how you haue gulled or bulled your husband. 1642 D. Rogers Naaman 228 Thou..hast fleerd and laught in thy sleeve at the sincere. 1753 T. Gray Long Story in Six Poems 19 Where, safe and laughing in his sleeve, He heard the distant din of war. 1775 R. B. Sheridan Rivals ii. i. 31 'Tis false, Sir! I know you are laughing in your sleeve. 1853 M. Arnold Empedocles on Etna i. ii The Gods laugh in their sleeve To watch man doubt and fear. 1888 Times 20 Sept. 7/2 Irishmen..laugh in their sleeve when the dull respectabilities of the Gladstonian party take the thing seriously. 1943 E. Blyton Summer Term at St Clare's vii. 46 She was annoyed to think that her class might be laughing up their sleeves at her. 1985 T. Waits Anywhere I lay my Head (song) in Rain Dogs (CD lyrics booklet) She's laughing in her sleeve at me I can feel it in my bones. 2003 P. Lovesey House Sitter (2004) xxii. 338 He's laughing up his sleeve, Hen. I'm sure he was stringing me along. e. (a) to laugh in a person's face: to show open contempt for a person, esp. with scornful mockery or laughter; to deride, ridicule, or scoff at a person blatantly. ΚΠ 1596 Raigne of Edward III sig. A4 See how occasion laughes me in the face. View more context for this quotation] 1603 S. Harsnett Declar. Popish Impostures 24 If shee fleere, and laugh in a mans face. 1725 M. Davys Lady's Tale in Wks. II. 127 He came forward, and made up to my Mother to salute her, which he did with such an awkard Air, that had not a little good Manners stood close at my Elbow, I had laugh'd in his Face. 1782 Pennsylvania Gaz. 10 Apr. As the French fleet lay just at that time before Fort Royal Bay, the moment he came out, they would retire into the Bay and laugh in his face. 1847 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair (1848) ii. 13 Rebecca laughed in her face, with a horrid sarcastic demoniacal laughter, that almost sent the schoolmistress into fits. 1902 J. Conrad Heart of Darkness iii I had no particular desire to enlighten them, but I had some difficulty in restraining myself from laughing in their faces so full of stupid importance. 1943 A. Rand Fountainhead ii. iv. 256 She sat there, looking up at him, laughing deliberately in his face, laughing ungraciously and not gaily. 2003 R. Lacey Street Bible 85 Because you've given his enemies so much ammunition, because they're laughing in his face, he'll punish you more. (b) to laugh in the face of: to show open contempt for (something, esp. a known hazard or encumbrance); to display blithe disregard for (something). ΚΠ 1641 W. Bridge Babylons Downfall 28 Let your faith laugh in the face of difficulties. 1691 J. Harris Mistakes v. i. 68 Had but my shafts hit right to my desire, I wou'd have laugh'd even in the face of heaven. 1796 S. T. Coleridge Lett. (1895) 209 Laugh in the faces of gloom and ill-lookingness. 1853 Godey's Lady's Bk. Sept. 230 That fearless trust which invests the soul in its first ignorance of evil, and causes it (having no choice but the Will of its Original) to laugh in the face of death. 1869 J. E. Cooke Mohun ii. xxvi. 177 Heaven had given him animal spirits, and he laughed in the face of danger. 1903 Locomotive Engineers' Monthly Jrnl. May 325/1 We are not all capable of laughing in the face of trouble and adversity, but we can at least make the attempt. 1998 R. Ray Certain Age 223 Because upstairs, laughing in the face of EU regulations, we were now cultivating our very own strain of biological warfare. f. to laugh till (also until) one cries: to laugh until tears run down one's face; (hyperbolically) to laugh heartily or uncontrollably. [Compare French rire aux larmes (1671).] ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > types of laughter > laugh in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > laugh convulsively or immoderately chuckle1598 to split (also break, burst, etc.) one's sides1598 to die with, or of laughing1609 to hold one's sides1609 to laugh till (also until) one cries1611 split1688 to burst one's sides1712 shake1729 to shake one's sides1736 to laugh oneself sick (also silly)1773 roll1819 to laugh one's head off1871 to break up1895 to fall about1918 pee1946 1611 J. Davies Scourge of Folly 234 Where each man in, and out of's humor pries Vpon himselfe; and laughs vntill hee cries. 1664 Advice of Father; or, Counsel to Child xvi. 96 I..have seen some laugh till they have cryed; hence I conclude, that mirth in its extream is madness. 1757 ‘L. Lively’ Merry Fellow II. 156 Though the ladies may sometimes laugh till they cry, yet is their beauty always benefited by it. 1780 T. Francklin tr. Lucian Wks. I. 400 Afranius Silo, a centurion, the rival of Pericles, who spoke so fine a declamation upon him as, by heaven, made me laugh till I cried again. 1838 E. Eden Jrnl. 20 Oct. in Up Country (1866) I. xxiii. 252 R. was never seen to laugh till he cried before. 1885 C. G. Leland Brand-new Ballads 62 In the front seat sat the Gallagher, And laughed until he cried. Revenge is sweet! 1900 J. Conrad Lord Jim xiii. 139 He made us laugh till we cried, and..would tiptoe amongst us and say, ‘It's all very well for you beggars to laugh.’ 1990 She Aug. 74/1 How many times have you laughed until you cried? That's the release mechanism coming into play. 2003 Tampa Bay (Florida) Mag. Jan.–Feb. 31/1 This comedic duo will make their audience laugh till they cry. g. (a) to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side of one's mouth and variants: to laugh bitterly or ruefully; to suffer a reverse of circumstances after feeling satisfaction or confidence about something. [Compare French rire à l'envers (1751).] ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > feel sorrow or grief [verb (intransitive)] > change from laughter to sorrow to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side of one's mouth1714 1714 T. Lucas Mem. Most Famous Gamesters & Sharpers 65 But tho' he laugh'd, 'twas on the wrong side of his Mouth. 1751 Polite Politician I. 89 The Absurd Fool brings the Laugh upon himself, while the Jesting Fool turns it upon his Antagonist, and generally makes him laugh on the wrong Side of the Mouth. 1809 B. H. Malkin tr. A. R. Le Sage Adventures Gil Blas I. ii. v. 227 We were made to laugh on the other side of our mouths by an unforeseen occurrence. 1884 W. E. Norris Thirlby Hall III. ix. 158 We shall be laughing on the wrong side of our mouths before the day is over, unless I'm very much mistaken. 1904 M. M. Bodkin Patsey the Omadaun vi. 130 But, faix, Foxey laughed the other side iv his mouth the next mornin' whin he had the carpenter in to put a new bottom to his till. 1907 Cent. Mag. Nov. 76/2 Huh! maybe they 'll laugh on the other side of their jaws later. 1955 Jrnl. Aesthetics & Art Crit. 13 345 You challenge laughter's power by threatening the laugher that he'll laugh on the wrong side of his mouth. 2000 N.Y. Mag. 10 Jan. 48/3 Unless you enjoy laughing out of the wrong side of your mouth, avoid this unconscionable Shamlet. (b) to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side: = Phrases 1g(a). Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > dejection > be or become dejected [verb (intransitive)] > change from exultation to dejection to laugh on the wrong side (of one's mouth, face, etc.)1771 to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side1779 to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side of one's face1807 1779 W. Cowper Love of World 24 You laugh—'tis well—the tale applied May make you laugh on t' other side. 1845 ‘J. Sharp’ Jonathan Sharp I. xxv. 137 I have half a mind to thrash a dozen of them, the blackguards; but never mind, they will yet laugh on the wrong side though. 1868 Student & Schoolmate Oct. 468 You 'll laugh out of the other side when you see me riding round with my seven thousand dollar carriage horses! 1889 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Robbery under Arms xxxiii I'll make some of ye laugh on the wrong side. 1915 J. E. Goodman Treasure Island iii. ii. 75 Laugh, by thunder, laugh—before a quarter of an hour's out, you'll laugh on the other side. (c) to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side of one's face and variants: to laugh bitterly or ruefully; to suffer a reverse of circumstances after feeling satisfaction or confidence about something. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > dejection > be or become dejected [verb (intransitive)] > change from exultation to dejection to laugh on the wrong side (of one's mouth, face, etc.)1771 to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side1779 to laugh on (also out of) the other (also wrong) side of one's face1807 1807 W. H. Ireland Stultifera Navis xxviii. 116 In vain repentance comes; how chang'd his case, He laughs—but on the wrong side of his face. 1898 J. D. Brayshaw Slum Silhouettes 246 An' as fer you, my lady, wait till I've got yer, I'll make yer laugh the uvver side o' yer face. 1911 Texas Mag. Sept. 46/2 You'll laugh out of the other side of your face before I'm through with you. 1951 ‘F. O'Connor’ Traveller's Samples 43 ‘Who are ye laughing at?’ I shouted, clenching my fists at them. ‘I'll make ye laugh at the other side of yeer faces if ye don't let me pass.’ 1975 S. Johnson Urbane Guerilla ii. 70 Stanton will soon laugh on the other side of his face. 2003 C. Birch Turn again Home xxix. 315 You'll laugh on the other side of your face when I call the police and they take your fingerprints! h. don't make me laugh: expressing disbelief or dismissal. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > expressions used in derision or ridicule [phrase] scilicet1539 don't make me laugh1733 I should smile1883 how do you like them (also those) apples?1895 in your face1975 1733 Lord Blunder's Confession i. 7 Dash. Though you have Assurance enough to abuse your Benefactor, I assure you, Mr. Trimwell, I shall resent your Usage to me in a Manner you won't like. Trim. Ha, ha, ha! pr'ythee, don't make me laugh. 1830 W. Taylor Hist. Surv. German Poetry III. v. 161 Gust. Wherein consists my crime? Second Off. The legate has denounced you as an outlaw. Gust. Don't make me laugh! 1942 J. G. Cozzens Just & Unjust I. 35 You think anybody's going to believe anything he says? Don't make me laugh! 1967 J. B. Priestley It's Old Country xiii. 142 ‘I'll never believe there was anything between him and Mum——’ ‘Don't make me laugh,’ Vic said, giving Tom a wink. 2001 K. Fearon & A. Verlaque Lurgan Champagne & Other Tales 89 We get our windows put in with bricks all the time. Call the police? Don't make me laugh. i. In collocation with cry, as one of two equally appropriate responses to a situation, event, etc. Chiefly in not to know whether to laugh or cry. ΚΠ 1766 F. Gentleman Royal Fables xiii. 71 A doubtful cloud o'er-hung each eye, He knew not which, to laugh, or cry. 1843 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) xii. 150 It was a toss-up with Tom Pinch whether he should laugh or cry. 1918 H. H. Peerless Diary 8 June in Brief Jolly Change (2003) 234 She didn't know whether to laugh or cry, and said so. I advised her to cry. 1940 D. Thomas Coll. Lett. (1987) 463 I'm so relieved I could laugh or cry. 1985 J. Sullivan Only Fools & Horses (1999) I. 4th Ser. Episode 6. 244 Well you should have seen his face Uncle, he didn't know whether to laugh or cry! 2000 J. Caughie Television Drama vi. 178 The viewer does not know whether to laugh or cry. j. Chiefly figurative. to laugh oneself sick (also silly): to laugh uncontrollably and at length. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > types of laughter > laugh in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > laugh convulsively or immoderately chuckle1598 to split (also break, burst, etc.) one's sides1598 to die with, or of laughing1609 to hold one's sides1609 to laugh till (also until) one cries1611 split1688 to burst one's sides1712 shake1729 to shake one's sides1736 to laugh oneself sick (also silly)1773 roll1819 to laugh one's head off1871 to break up1895 to fall about1918 pee1946 1773 F. Burney Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1988) I. 303 Mrs. Rishton & I Laughed ourselves sick. 1858 St. James's Medley Feb. 303 I nearly laughed myself sick at him today. 1892 D. Strange Farmers' Tariff Man. 32 [Protectionists] laugh themselves silly as they ask how the tariff is added. 1921 H. C. Witwer Leather Pushers xii. 325 I'll wager she's laughing herself sick right now. 1977 R. Angell Five Seasons i. 21 We could all laugh ourselves silly at the sight of a large, outraged umpire suddenly calling in a suspected wetback for inspection. 2006 A. Thomas Three Dog Life (2007) 53 We laughed ourselves sick at the kitchen table. k. to make a cat laugh: see cat n.1 13j. l. figurative. to laugh one's head off: to laugh heartily or uncontrollably. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > types of laughter > laugh in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > laugh convulsively or immoderately chuckle1598 to split (also break, burst, etc.) one's sides1598 to die with, or of laughing1609 to hold one's sides1609 to laugh till (also until) one cries1611 split1688 to burst one's sides1712 shake1729 to shake one's sides1736 to laugh oneself sick (also silly)1773 roll1819 to laugh one's head off1871 to break up1895 to fall about1918 pee1946 1871 ‘M. Twain’ Burlesque Autobiogr. 6 He could imitate anybody's hand so closely that it was enough to make a person laugh his head off to see it. 1907 Musical Times 48 584/2 The king nearly laughed his head off. 1974 R. Jeffries Mistakenly in Mallorca v. 44 Laugh your head off, thought Mayans sourly. 1990 Sun 20 Oct. 13/1 When I said I'd started a strict diet the crew cracked up and just couldn't stop laughing their heads off at me. 2001 B. Hatch Internat. Gooseberry 134 When I jumped, she laughed her head off. m. laugh! I thought I'd die and variants: emphasizing the hilarity of some past event. ΚΠ 1892 A. Chevalier Wot Cher 4 (song) Laugh! I thought I should 'ave died, Knock'd 'em in the Old Kent Road! 1898 J. D. Brayshaw Slum Silhouettes 246 'E does a bunk dahn the street, lookin' fer all the world like a hunder-done pancake. Laugh—I thought I should ha' died. 1958 F. Hurst Anat. of Me i. 15 I could listen to Mrs. Hurst talk all day! Laugh! I thought I'd die! The way she says things. 2004 J. B. Tarver Blaze of Glory ix. 103 Laugh? I thought I'd die t'other night when he tried to say Mississippi. n. to laugh out of court: see out of court adv. 2. o. Originally U.S. to laugh it up. (a) To laugh heartily; to have a good time, enjoy oneself. ΚΠ 1906 Munsey's Mag. Sept. 783/1 I thought if you'd come over and—and laugh it up a little bit. 1958 J. Weidman Enemy Camp ii. 220 You start laughing it up over those lunch boxes like all the rest of us around that ping-pong table so Shumacher won't get suspicious and start asking questions. 1986 New Yorker 2 June 104/2 It is hard to laugh it up when the question most frequently asked about the man you work for is whether he should resign his office. 2010 Times & Transcipt (New Brunswick) (Nexis) 9 Feb. d1 We get another chance to forget about the cold and dark of February and laugh it up with the Hubcap Comedy Festival. (b) Used in imperative (with ironic or sarcastic force) to suggest an impending reversal of fortune: ‘laugh while you can.’ ΚΠ 1971 I. Haiblum Tsaddik of Seven Wonders 46 Laugh it up, pal, but wait till the king hears about this. 1980 R. Abbot Play on! ii. 58 That's it—laugh it up—we'll see just how funny you think this is tomorrow night! 1996 A. Fein et al. Simpsons Comics Strike Back! 51/1 Laugh it up, cue-ball! Learning the contents of this manual is all that stands between our career in the sky and life on earth with you. 2010 Northern Territory News (Darwin) (Nexis) 1 Mar. 23 Laugh it up jokers—you're all walking to the next gig. p. colloquial. to be laughing: to be in a fortunate or successful position. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > prosper or flourish [verb (intransitive)] > be in easy circumstances (to eat, live on) the fat of the land1530 to be laughing1930 to have never had it so good1944 1930 J. Brophy & E. Partridge Songs & Slang Brit. Soldier: 1914–1918 136 Laughing, comfortable, safe, fortunate, especially in contrast with others or with normal circumstances. E.g. ‘He's got a job at Brigade Head Quarters, so he's laughing’; ‘Once I get to the C.C.S. I'm laughing’. 1968 Listener 19 Dec. 812/3 Oh, Ron, he's got a job—£30 a week he can get now, you know. Skilled motor mechanic, and not put-on like it used to be... Old Ron's laughing. 1975 M. Stanier Singing Time 255 So long as you're a jump ahead you're laughing. 2000 I. Pattison Stranger here Myself (2001) iii. 117 I spotted a card in the window of a Lyons Tearoom. Dishwashers Wanted. No Exp. Nec.‘That's it,’ I said to Cotter, ‘we're laughing.’ q. to laugh like little Audrey: see little adj., pron., n., and adv. Phrases 1d. r. to laugh like a drain: see drain n. 1f. s. to laugh all the way to the bank: see bank n.3 Phrases 2. P2. Proverbs and proverbial phrases. a. they laugh that win and variants. Now rare. ΚΠ 1536 R. Morison Remedy for Sedition sig. f.vi He that is ouercomme shall wepe, ye say. Trowe you they shall laugh that wynne? 1599 Hist. Syr Clyomon & Clamydes sig. F But I may zay to you my nabor, Hogs maid had a clap, wel let them laugh that win. 1622 T. May Heire iii. i. sig. E2v I know thou..laughest at my falling house, but let them laugh That winne the prize, things nere are knowne till ended. 1673 E. Hickeringill Gregory 204 They only can best laugh that win. 1767 D. Garrick Epilogue in G. Colman Eng. Merchant 72 Let them laugh that win! 1777 Bonner & Middleton's Bristol Jrnl. 5 July 3/1 The old Proverb says, let them laugh that wins—They glory over us, by saying that our Fund is almost exhausted—that is our look out not theirs. 1807 J. Beresford Miseries Human Life II. xx. 271 We laugh that win. 1874 A. Trollope Phineas Redux I. xxxvii. 309 ‘You are laughing at me, I know.’ ‘Let them laugh that win.’ 1909 Times 25 Feb. 9/6 They laugh that win, and we have won. b. to laugh and grow (also be) fat. ΚΠ 1596 J. Harington New Disc. Aiax sig. Fv I dare vndertake, this answer will satisfie my Lord Mayor of London, and many of the worshipful of the Citie, that make sweete gaines of stinking wares, and will laugh and be fat. 1673 E. Hickeringill Gregory 169 So many people, like Mithridates, or the Maid in Pliny, live upon that, laugh and grow fat with that, that would ruine others. 1777 S. J. Pratt Liberal Opinions VI. cxxxv. 180 Laugh and grow fat is my rule. 1861 I. M. Beeton Bk. Housh. Managem. xxi. 464 ‘Laugh and grow fat’ is a good maxim. 1873 Phrenol. Jrnl. Sept. 155/1 We have an old adage which runs, ‘laugh and be fat,’ which, I think, is largely corroborated by human experience. 1955 Jrnl. Aesthetics & Art Crit. 13 344 Folk-thought speaks of the ‘saving sense of humor’, it advises: ‘Laugh and grow fat.’ 2009 Corkman (Nexis) 30 Apr. Her motto in life was ‘laugh and grow fat’ and she was a lady who was never in bad humour or angry. c. he laughs best (also longest) who laughs last and variants: present setbacks, humiliations, etc., are unimportant, so long as one ultimately prevails. Cf. to have the last laugh at laugh n. Phrases 2c. [Compare French rira bien qui rira le dernier (1667 or earlier).] ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > [phrase] > be ultimately the winner he laughs best (also longest) who laughs lastc1608 c1608 Times Complaint in Christmas Prince (1922) 109 Hee laugheth best that laugheth to the end. 1715 J. Vanbrugh tr. F. C. Dancourt Country House ii. 23 What, does she play her Jests upon me too!—but mum, he laughs best that laughs last. 1823 W. Scott Peveril IV. iii. 49 Your Grace knows the French proverb, ‘He laughs best who laughs last.’ 1871 E. Yates Nobody's Fortune (1872) II. vii. 130 Those who laugh last laugh longest. 1920 O. Onions Case in Camera 147 Very well, young-fellowme-lad; you watch it! They laugh best that laugh last. It isn't over yet! 1953 B. Menczer Catholic Polit. Thought, 1789–1848 (1962) 33 He laughs longest who laughs last, and..the Church laughed last. 1994 Spy (N.Y.) Aug. 5 He laughs best that laughs last, so we're right now enjoying a good solid thigh-slapper. d. to laugh at oneself first: expressing the idea of using self-ridicule to fend off ridicule by others. ΚΠ 1678 R. L'Estrange tr. Of Anger viii. 83 in Seneca's Morals Abstracted (1679) No Man was ever ridiculous to others, that laught at himself first. 1732 T. Fuller Gnomologia 76 He is not laughed at, that laughs at himself first. 1786 H. L. Piozzi Anecd. Johnson 247 The old maxim, of beginning to laugh at yourself first where you have any thing ridiculous about you. 1837 M. M. Busk Plays & Poems i. ii. 240 Laugh at yourself first, my dear fellow, and the world's laugh will be rather with, than at you. 1874 Every Sat. 127/1 Always laugh at yourself first, is a good rule. 1909 Columbus Med. Jrnl. 33 599/1 Laugh at yourself first, then laugh at others like you. 2008 Daily Star (Nexis) 30 Apr. 17 Laugh at yourself first and they can't win. e. laugh, and the world laughs with you; weep, and you weep alone and variants. Also shortened to laugh, and the world laughs with you. ΚΠ 1883 E. Wheeler in Sun (N.Y.) 25 Feb. 3/6 Laugh and the world laughs with you, Weep, and you weep alone. 1899 Railroad Trainman Dec. 1107 ‘Laugh, and the world laughs with you.’ It's as true as anything that has ever been written. 1907 ‘O. Henry’ Trimmed Lamp & Other Stories 211 Laugh, and the world laughs with you; weep, and they give you the laugh. 1985 C. R. Swindoll Living on Ragged Edge 24 ‘Laugh and the world laughs with you. Cry and you cry alone.’ I've found quite the opposite is true. 1998 Cosmopolitan (U.K. ed.) Sept. 121/3 Snoring is sexual suicide—laugh and the world laughs with you, snore and you sleep alone. 2010 Hanover (Ont.) Post (Nexis) 5 Mar. a7 Laugh and the world laughs with you. Or in my case, at you. Phrasal verbs With adverbs in specialized senses. to laugh away 1. transitive. To dismiss or banish with laughter; to laugh off. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > ignoring, disregard > ignore, disregard [verb (transitive)] > dismiss from consideration > with laughter laugha1387 to laugh out1566 to laugh away1590 to laugh over1627 to laugh off1676 1590 Tarltons Newes out of Purgatorie 28 At this iest, Signor Bartolo fell into such a laughing and all his guests with him, that hee laught away choller. 1649 R. Baxter Saints Everlasting Rest (new ed.) iii. iii. §v. 315 They could laugh away sorrow, and sing away cares, and drive away these Melancholy thoughts. 1692 W. Sherlock Serm. preached before Queen 18 Some Men may laugh away the Thoughts of Hell. 1780 W. Cowper Table Talk 239 And laughs the sense of misery far away. 1797 A. Radcliffe Italian II. ii. 79 He..tried to laugh away her apprehensions. 1821 Ld. Byron Marino Faliero (2nd issue) iv. i. 97 I strove To laugh the thought away. 1853 C. Kingsley Hypatia II. xiv. 326 He tried to laugh away his own fears. And yet they ripened..into certainty. 1920 E. Wharton Age of Innocence xxx. 296 If May had spoken out her grievances..he might have laughed them away. 1970 S. Kudo tr. Z. Shibayama Flower does not Talk 75 You may think that it is just a humorous cartoon with no special significance, and laugh it away. 2005 Time Out N.Y. 17 Nov. 68/4 Laugh away your stress. 2. transitive. To while away (time) with laughter. ΚΠ 1602 T. Lodge in tr. Josephus Wks. To Rdr. sig. ¶iijv Some..beget officious idlenes, laughing away houres, and nourish repent. 1653 N. Hookes Miscellanea Poetica in Amanda 140 Poor wits to help you laugh away the time. 1705 W. Coward Abramideis i. 32 The Sons of Men..Slumber in Peace, and laugh their Days away. 1781 W. Cowper Retirem. 452 He..talks and laughs away his vacant hours. 1822 A. M. Porter Roche-Blanche II. v. 177 They would innocently laugh away the time, which they had at first destined for serious discourse. 1875 Scribner's Monthly Aug. 499/1 They laughed away the half hours waiting for the pageant. 1908 A. Austin Sacred & Profane Love 55 Warrior grim and maiden gay Fought and laughed the hours away. 2003 P. van Wyk Burnham 160 Afterwards, they talked and laughed away the day. ΚΠ a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) ii. vi. 106 Pompey doth this day laugh away his Fortune. View more context for this quotation transitive. To subdue or silence with laughter or ridicule. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > taciturnity or reticence > refrain from uttering [verb (transitive)] > silence or prevent from speaking to stop a person's mouthc1175 stilla1225 to keep ina1420 stifle1496 to knit up1530 to muzzle (up) the mouth1531 choke1533 muzzle?1542 to tie a person's tongue1544 tongue-tiea1555 silence1592 untongue1598 to reduce (a person or thing) to silence1605 to bite in1608 gaga1616 to swear downa1616 to laugh down1616 stifle1621 to cry down1623 unworda1627 clamour1646 splint1648 to take down1656 snap1677 stick1708 shut1809 to shut up1814 to cough down1823 to scrape down1855 to howl down1872 extinguish1878 hold1901 shout1924 to pipe down1926 1616 B. Jonson Entertainm. at Highgate 884 in Wks. I Lords, for your selues, your owne cups crowne, The ladies, ifaith, else will laugh you downe. 1749 H. Jones Poems Several Occasions 154 Hence wicked Wits would laugh Religion down. 1830 S. T. Coleridge Let. (1971) VI. 846 It is very easy to laugh or sneer down a literary Man who has..advanced and enforced any connexus of..fundamental Principles. 1856 Ld. Tennyson Maud (rev. ed.) xix. vi, in Maud & Other Poems (new ed.) 67 Whenever she touch'd on me This brother had laugh'd her down. 1900 Philistine 1900 124 He was stung by the continued efforts of the press to laugh him down. 1936 E. Chodorov Kind Lady ii. 58 I laughed her down of course—told her she was a silly woman, I insulted her frightfully. 1991 Oxf. Jrnl. Legal Stud. 11 380 Students who ask questions indicating a conservative approach to the law are laughed down by wise-cracking professors. transitive. To dismiss or banish with laughter. In later use also ironic (and frequently in imperative) in to laugh that off. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > ignoring, disregard > ignore, disregard [verb (transitive)] > dismiss from consideration > with laughter laugha1387 to laugh out1566 to laugh away1590 to laugh over1627 to laugh off1676 1676 T. Otway Don Carlos iii. 22 Nay think not by your smiles, and careless port, To laugh it off. 1715 J. Vanbrugh tr. F. C. Dancourt Country House i. i They all got drunk and lay in the Barn, and next Morning laugh'd it off for a Frolick. 1795 E. Fenwick Secresy II. xvi. 173 She laughed me off without a tittle of information. 1809 B. H. Malkin tr. A. R. Le Sage Adventures Gil Blas IV. xii. i. 376 Instead of laughing it off, I was fool enough to be angry. 1880 E. Lynn Linton Rebel of Family I. ii. 37 Clarissa..laughed off the proposal as a joke. 1936 ‘N. Blake’ Thou Shell of Death xii. 224 Why should he want them [sc. footprints] preserved if it wasn't he who originally made them?.. Laugh that one off! 1974 Times 15 Jan. 14/6 I claim to have a complete answer to the charge, so laugh that off, Sir Peter. 2002 Business 2.0 Oct. 98/1 Semel seemed taken aback for an instant, then laughed it off. Obsolete. transitive. To dismiss or banish with laughter; to laugh off. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > ignoring, disregard > ignore, disregard [verb (transitive)] > dismiss from consideration > with laughter laugha1387 to laugh out1566 to laugh away1590 to laugh over1627 to laugh off1676 1566 W. Adlington tr. Apuleius .XI. Bks. Golden Asse ix. f. 90v They woulde not be confounded nor abashed, but iestyng & laughinge out the matter, gan say [etc.]. 1591 E. Spenser Prosopopoia in Complaints 704 Yet would he laugh it out..And tell them that they greatly him mistooke. a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) iv. i. 112 Now he denyes it faintly, and laughes it out . View more context for this quotation 1806 T. S. Surr Winter in London III. viii. 210 Though burning with envy..her grace attempted to laugh out the scene. 1. transitive. To recall or repeat with laughter or mirth. ΚΠ a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) v. v. 234 Let vs..Laugh this sport ore by a Countrie fire. View more context for this quotation 1804 R. C. Dallas Aubrey IV. xlv. 219 I shall have great pleasure in laughing the matter over with him at your table. 1871 Lippincott's Monthly Mag. Aug. 161/2 I thought she would have rushed back to laugh the scene over with me. 1939 L. M. Montgomery Anne of Ingleside xxviii. 191 Anne always had contrived to keep a straight face when a straight face was indicated, no matter how crazily she might laugh it over with Gilbert afterwards. 2004 C. Kettlewell Electric Dreams 11 He..was looking forward to shorts and a T-shirt and maybe a cold beer at home, and laughing it over with his new housemate. 2. transitive. To dismiss or banish with laughter; to laugh off. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > ignoring, disregard > ignore, disregard [verb (transitive)] > dismiss from consideration > with laughter laugha1387 to laugh out1566 to laugh away1590 to laugh over1627 to laugh off1676 1627 P. Forbes Eubulus iii. 56 How-so-ever you would seeme, for-sooth, to make a verie light account of it; and would, according to your manner, laugh-over those Argumentes, which most pintch you. 1639 in D. Laing Var. Pieces Fugitive Sc. Poetry (1825) 2nd. Ser. xvii. 102 Yet..all those torturing tossings Which I have tryde, I laught them ou'r as sportings. 1748 T. Smollett Roderick Random I. xi. 76 Come, come, my dear..it don't signify fretting now,—we shall laugh it over as a frolick. 1895 P. Jones Pobratim viii. 150 Mara came out, and found her ghastly pale; she tried to laugh the matter over. 1910 Harper's Mag. Jan. 198/2 Some made it out an evil sign for their voyage. But Bikki laughed it over. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1592v.eOE |
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