humor
Kelime Anlamı :

1. mizah.
2. espri.
3. safra balgam veya sevda salgısı.
4. suyuk.
5. suyuna gitmek.
6. mizaç.
7. şaka.
8. ayak uydurmak.
9. alttan almak.
10. güldürü.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Tanımlar :
1. to comply with the humor, fancy, or disposition of; soothe by compliance; indulge; gratify.
2. to endeavor to comply with the peculiarities or exigencies of; adapt one's self to; suit or accommodate: as, to humor one's part or the piece.
3.
4. to give a slight direction or turn to (a fly, in fishing, or the like).
5. moisture; an exhalation.
6. an animal fluid, whether natural or morbid; now, especially, any of the thinner bodily fluids, limpid, serous, or sanious, as the constituent fluids or semi-fluids of the eye, or the watery matter in some cutaneous eruptions.
7. hence one's special condition of mind or quality of feeling; peculiarity of disposition, permanent or temporary; mental state; mood: as, a surly humor; a strange humor.
8. specificallydisposition, especially a capricious disposition; freak; whim; vagary; oddness of mood or manners: in this sense very fashionable in the time of Shakspere.
9. A facetious or jocular turn of mind, as in conversation; the disposition to find, or the faculty of finding, ludicrous aspects or suggestions in common facts or notions.
10. in lit., witty, droll, or jocose imagination, conspicuous in thought and expression, and tending to excite amusement; that quality in composition which is characterized by the predominance of the ludicrous or absurdly incongruous in the choice or treatment of a theme: distinguished from wit, which implies superior subtlety and finer thought. humor in literature may be further distinguished by its humane and sympathetic quality, by force of which it is often found blending the pathetic with the ludicrous, and by the same stroke moving to tears and laughter, in this respect improving upon the pure and often cold intellectuality which is the essence of wit.
11. see the adjectives.
12. fancy, whimsey, crotchet, fad.
13. and
14. wit, humor (see wit); pleasantry, jocoseness, facetiousness, jocularity.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia