HUMOR


Meaning of HUMOR in English

I. ˈ(h)yümə(r) noun

( -s )

Usage: see -or

Etymology: Middle English humour, from Middle French humeur, from Medieval Latin & Latin; Medieval Latin humor humor of the body, from Latin humor, umor moisture, fluid; akin to Middle Dutch wac damp, wet, Old Norse vökr damp, Latin humēre, umēre to be moist or damp, uvidus damp, moist, Greek hygros wet, Sanskrit ukṣati he sprinkles, he moistens

1.

a.

(1) : a normal functioning fluid or semifluid of the body (as the blood, lymph, or bile) especially of vertebrates

(2) : a secretion that is itself an excitant of activity (as certain hormones) — see neurohumor

b.

(1) in medieval physiology : a fluid or juice of an animal or plant ; specifically : one of the four fluids entering into the constitution of the body and determining by their relative proportions a person's health and temperament — see black bile , blood , phlegm , yellow bile

(2) : constitutional or habitual disposition, character, or bent : temperament

are you an agreeable person? Have you a pleasant humor ? — Alfred Buchanan

every word they spoke … attested to their mutual love, the combining of their humors — Djuna Barnes

the women were horrified or admiring, as their humor moved them — Edith Wharton

(3) : temporary state of mind : temper , mood

not in a humor to hear you further — Thomas Hardy

in excellent humor

after the execution … the humor of the court involuntarily changed — Francis Hackett

(4) : a sudden, unpredictable, or unreasoning inclination : caprice , whim , fancy

a very frolicsome and tricky creature … full of wild fantastic humors — W.H.Hudson †1922

conceived the humor of impeaching casual passerby … and wreaking vengeance on them — Charles Dickens

victims of nature's cataclysmic humors, dust storms and drought — Julian Dana

(5) humors plural : actions revealing the oddities or quirks of human temperament : whimsical or fantastic actions : vagaries

the humors and small details of ordinary life — John Erskine †1951

c. obsolete : moisture , vapor

the humors of the dank morning — Shakespeare

2.

a. : that quality in a happening, an action, a situation, or an expression of ideas which appeals to a sense of the ludicrous or absurdly incongruous : comic or amusing quality

the humor of his plight

the delightful humor of a book

b. : the mental faculty of discovering, expressing, or appreciating ludicrous or absurdly incongruous elements in ideas, situations, happenings, or acts : droll imagination or its expressions

the man is completely without humor

— compare wit

c. : the act of or effort at being humorous : something (as an action, saying, or writing) that is or is designed to be humorous

his heavy humor fell completely flat

never read any humor above the so-called comics — Ellie Tucker

a humor magazine

Synonyms: see mood , wit

- out of humor

II. transitive verb

( humored ; humored ; humoring -m(ə)riŋ ; humors )

Usage: see -or

1. : to comply with the humor of : soothe or content by indulgence or compliance : indulge

one must discover and humor his weaknesses — H.M.Parshley

2. : to comply with the nature of : adjust matters to the peculiarities or exigencies of : adapt oneself to

yielding to, and humoring the motion of the limbs and twigs — William Bartram

Synonyms: see indulge

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.