|
|
laugh·ter (l f t r, läf -)n.1. The act of laughing. 2. The sound produced by laughing. 3. Archaic A cause or subject for laughter.
[Middle English, from Old English hleahtor.] |
laughter [ˈlɑːftə]n1. the action of or noise produced by laughing 2. the experience or manifestation of mirth, amusement, scorn, or joy [Old English hleahtor; related to Old Norse hlātr] Laughterrelating to foolish or excessive laughter. [Allusion to Democritus, the laughing philosopher, born in Abdero.] raucous laughter; loud whinnying. a form of divination that determines a person’s character or future from the way he laughs. the quality or condition of being merry or cheerful. — jocund, adj. an abnormal fear or dislike of ridicule. 1. the ability or disposition to laugh. 2. a humorous awareness of the ridiculous and absurd. 3. laughter. Laughter a clutch of eggs; a group of ostlers— Bk. of St. Albans, 1486. Laughter See Also: GAIETY, GRINS, HUMOR, SMILES - As the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of a fool —The Holy Bible/Ecclesiastes
- Basically when you laugh you have to make a fool of yourself … it’s like sex —Robin Williams, “Sixty Minutes” interview, September 21, 1986
- Chuckle … it sounded like a trapped wasp —Jonathan Gash
- Chuckles … empty and round, like bubbles —Dan Jacobson
- Chuckling like a jovial insurance salesman —James Crumley
- Contralto laughter, like a violin obligato under trills of a flute —Carlos Baker
- A dry crackle like leaves crushed underfoot —Louise Erdrich
- Dry laughter like the cackle of crows or the crackling of fallen leaves underfoot —Margaret Laurence
- Giggled … like a naughty child which has unintentionally succeeded in amusing the grown-ups —Christopher Isherwood
- (They kissed. And) giggled like cartoon mice —Tom Robbins
- Giggle, like a child watching a Hollywood adventure film —Nadine Gordimer
- A good laugh is sunshine in a house —William Makepeace Thackeray
- Heavy, melodious laughter, like silver coins shaking in a bag —Aharon Megged
- Her braying laugh rang out like the report of a shotgun —James Thurber
- Her laugh broke like a dish —Cynthia Ozick
- Her laugh crackled … like a leap of electricity —Richard Francis
- Her laugh pealed out like a raven escaping into the night —Donald McCaig
- Her laugh rang like the jangling of bracelets —Derek Walcott
- Her laughter hung in the air like sleigh bells on a winter night —Jay Parini
- Her laughter was a titanic, passionate thing that seemed to pass up like a wave from her toes to her mouth —Pat Conroy
- High laugh, like a dove cry —Eudora Welty
- A high laugh like a wicked witch —Carolyn Chute
- His laughter thickened like a droning bell —James Wright
- A hoarse, very small laugh, like a cat’s cough —Frank Swinnerton
- A horrifying derisive laugh, like rolling tin —Barry Hannah
- Laugh … as if a demon within him were exulting with gloating scorn —Iris Murdoch
- (Louisa’s) laugh begins high and descends from there like a cascade —Daphne Merkin
- Laughed, a little drugged giggle, like chatter —Paul Theroux
- Laughed contemptuously like a whore being offered too little money —Gary Hart
- Laughed, like a bowlful of jelly —Clement C. Moore
- Laughed like a windup machine —John D. MacDonald
- Laughed like monkeys —Richard Ford
- Laughed like murmurs of the sea —W. B. Yeats
- Laughed … like the trill of a hedge-warbler —Frank Swinnerton
- A laugh exploded out of me like a sneeze —Scott Spencer
- Laughing, a sound like wind in the grass —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- A laugh is just like sunshine —Anon rhyme
The simile is the poem’s repeat motif. - Laugh … like the barking of a fox —Erich Maria Remarque
- Laugh … like a bird’s carol on the sunrise breeze —John Greenleaf Whittier
- Laugh like a hyena —William Shakespeare
This simile from As You Like It crops up in many a modern short story and novel. - Laugh … like a spoon tinkling against a medicine glass —Katherine Mansfield
- Laugh … like a thrush singing —Oscar Wilde
- A laugh like clapboards being ripped off the side of a house —Peter De Vries
- Laughs [in a film] … come out of despair, like bits of green in a graveyard —Walter Goodman about the movie, No Surrender, New York Times, August 6, 1986
- Laughs like a rhinoceros —Tom Davies
The person Davies described was Samuel Johnson. - Laughs like little bells in light wind —George Garrett
- Laughter … checked by small clutches of muscle, like tiny fists, at the corners of his mouth —Leonard Michaels
- Laughter crackling like a schoolgirl who has not experienced enough of the world to fear it —Ira Wood
- Laughter cruel as barbed wire —George Garrett
- Laughter falls like rain or tears —Dame Edith Sitwell
- Laughter fell like a shower of coins —George Garrett
- Laughter … high and free and musical, like a happy soprano limbering up —Harvey Swados
- Laughter hung smoke-like in the sudden stillness —Ralph Ellison
- Laughter … keeps coming like a poison that must be ejected —Nora Johnson
- Laughter leaped suddenly from her throat … then stopped, like something flung away and lost —Graham Swift
- Laughter like hiccoughs —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Laughter, light and restrained like the clatter of rolling nuts —Yisrael Zarchi
- Laughter lonelier than tears —Anonymous blurb preceding a humorous quote, New York Times Book Review/Noted With Pleasure, September 14, 1986
- The laughter of a fool is like that of a horse —Welsh proverb
See Also: FOOLISHNESS, STUPIDITY - Laughter roared through the spectators like wind through trees —Gerald Kersh
- Laughter spilled out of his prodigious frame like gravel being unloaded from a dump truck —Pat Conroy
- A laugh that rippled … like the sound of a hidden brook —O. Henry
- A laugh that rumbles like a freight train in the night —Michael Goodwin about sports broadcaster, Steve Zabriskie, New York Times/TV Sports, October 2, 1986
- A laugh that unfolds like a head of lettuce —Antler
- Let out a cackle of a laugh, like the sound a hen might make if the hen were mad about something —Larry McMurtry
- Men who never laugh may have good hearts, but they are deep seated; like some springs, they have their inlet and outlet from below, and show no sparkling bubble on the brim —Josh Billings
Words originally in Billings’ phonetic dialect are: ‘laff (laugh), ‘hav’ (have), ‘sum’ (some). - A most pleasant laugh, bubbly and controlled, like fine champagne —Margaret Millar
- Peal of laughter like the ringing of silvery bells —Nathanial Hawthorne
- A queer stage laugh, like the cackle of a baffled villain in a melodrama —Edith Wharton
- (Boutin’s mouth opened from ear to ear in) a roar of laughter, like the bursting of a mortar —Honoré de Balzac
- She laughed, sounding like a small barking dog —Robert Campbell
- She pursed her lips each time she laughed, making laughter seem a gesture of self-control —W. P. Kinsella
- A silvery laugh, like a brook running out to meet the river —Mike Fredman
- A slow ripple of laughter, like a scattering of autumn leaves —Robert Traver
- A snort of a chuckle like a bull-frog —Lawrence Durrell
- Some … laugh just as a rat does, who has caught a steel trap, with his tail —Josh Billings
In the original phonetic dialect this is: “Laff just az a rat duz, who haz caught a steel trap with his tale.” - The sound [of laughter] was like the whirring of an old grandfather clock before it strikes —Frank Swinnerton
- Stopped laughing as suddenly as if a set ring had been broken —Loren D. Estleman
- A sudden fizz of laughter like soda water —George Garrett
- Tittering like a small bird —Beryl Markham
- Twinkled like Old King Cole —Donald McCaig
- When he laughed, a satyr-like quality suffused his face —Nathaniel Benchley
- When she does laugh … it’s like polished crystal, like a stream in the Alps racing over a pebbly bed here below, like … like another simile —Hanoch Bartov
For anyone interested in multiple similes … here’s the simile itself to round up a medley of comparisons. - When she laughed it was as if a wren sang —Frank Swinnerton
- When she was about to laugh, her tone grew higher and melodious, easing into the laugh like a singer easing from recitative to an aria —Lynne Sharon Schwartz
- Wrinkles of laughter leaped into sight on his face, like small friendly insects running all over it —Romain Gary
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | laughter - the sound of laughing cackle - a loud laugh suggestive of a hen's cackle giggle - a foolish or nervous laugh titter - a nervous restrained laugh | | 2. | laughter - the activity of laughing; the manifestation of joy or mirth or scorn; "he enjoyed the laughter of the crowd"activity - any specific behavior; "they avoided all recreational activity" |
laughternoun2. amusement, entertainment, humour, glee, fun, mirth, hilarity, merriment Pantomime is about bringing laughter to thousands.Quotations "If we may believe our logicians, man is distinguished from all other creatures by the faculty of laughter" [Joseph Addison] "The only honest art form is laughter, comedy. You can't fake it ... try to fake three laughs in an hour - ha ha ha ha ha - they'll take you away, man. You can't" [Lenny Bruce Performing and the Art of Comedy] "As the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of a fool" Bible: Ecclesiastes
Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
|