FACETIOUSNESS - traducción al árabe
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FACETIOUSNESS - traducción al árabe

TENDENCY OF SOMEONE TO POINT OUT AND EMPHASIZE THE COMICAL NATURE OF SOMETHING (OR THE MENTAL STATE THAT LEADS TO THIS TENDENCY)
Funny; Humorous; Sense of humor; Sense of humour; Hilarious; Sense of Humour; Humor studies; Humor (funny); Comedy technique; Humor; Humourous; Hilariously; Nerd humour; Hilarity; Facetiousness; Facetiously; Humoristic; Funniness; Hillarious; Humor study; Humour sense; Funni
  • Humour can be a way of dealing with the menacing or unpleasant: Sprayed comment below a memorial plaque for [[Alois Alzheimer]] who first described the memory-damaging [[Alzheimer's disease]] - the German text means "Alois, we will never forget you!"
  • [[Boris Yeltsin]] and [[Bill Clinton]] enjoying a joke, in spite of their language differences
  • Surprise]] is a component of humour.
  • Muhammad al-Baqir's [[Hadith]] about humour: "Indeed Allah loves those who are playful among people without obscenity."
  • A man laughing

FACETIOUSNESS         

الصفة

ظَرِيف ; فَكِه ; كَيِّس ; مُنَكِّت ; نَكَّات

FACETIOUSLY         

الصفة

ظَرِيف ; فَكِه ; كَيِّس ; مُنَكِّت ; نَكَّات

hilarity         
اسْم : قَصْفٌ . مَرَحٌ صاخب

Definición

humorous
If someone or something is humorous, they are amusing, especially in a clever or witty way.
He was quite humorous, and I liked that about him.
ADJ
humorously
He looked at me humorously as he wrestled with the door...
ADV: ADV with v, ADV adj

Wikipedia

Humour

Humour (Commonwealth English) or humor (American English) is the tendency of experiences to provoke laughter and provide amusement. The term derives from the humoral medicine of the ancient Greeks, which taught that the balance of fluids in the human body, known as humours (Latin: humorcode: lat promoted to code: la , "body fluid"), controlled human health and emotion.

People of all ages and cultures respond to humour. Most people are able to experience humour—be amused, smile or laugh at something funny (such as a pun or joke)—and thus are considered to have a sense of humour. The hypothetical person lacking a sense of humour would likely find the behaviour to be inexplicable, strange, or even irrational. Though ultimately decided by personal taste, the extent to which a person finds something humorous depends on a host of variables, including geographical location, culture, maturity, level of education, intelligence and context. For example, young children may favour slapstick such as Punch and Judy puppet shows or the Tom and Jerry cartoons, whose physical nature makes it accessible to them. By contrast, more sophisticated forms of humour such as satire require an understanding of its social meaning and context, and thus tend to appeal to a more mature audience.

Ejemplos de uso de FACETIOUSNESS
1. Was it not lazy to lapse into an easy facetiousness instead of tackling issues that matter?
2. Facetiousness and sarcasm aside, Rice’s visit to Pakistan was indicative of the continuum of the use that Pakistan provides to facilitate America’s war on so–called terror.
3. Add your comment Posted by Pete, Mail online sport, 4.30pm 21 DECEMBER Facetiousness alert: As a firm believer that the Scottish giants should stay, well, in Scotland, Celtic‘s signing of Roy Keane has shown that Scottish teams can compete with even the great Real Madrid for the game‘s top players.
4. Article continues Departing doyen Andrew Marr, my old friend and erstwhile editor, has a wry and dry delivery, a sharp wit underpinned by a breadth of experience and interest that gives him a distinctive elan as he walks that treacherous BBC tightrope between fair judgment and opinion. (The one downside to his reign has been his many lesser imitators who mistake genuine wit for callow facetiousness and cynical sneering, as in the truly toe–curling Yesterday in Parliament slot.) Marr has had enough of standing on College Green for quick two–ways with presenters÷ television news burns out the brains of many who stand too long in its glare.
5. Instead, he stood up amidst the United Nations future–building of the post–war era and defined his conservatism as "tacit acknowledgment that all that is finally important in human experience is behind us." This is perhaps the sort of comment that led cultural critic Dwight MacDonald to accuse Buckley of "soggy facetiousness." But there wasn‘t much MacDonald could do with puns such as the one that appeared in the National Review when it was learned that the American Academy of Dermatology and Syphilology was dropping the last two words of its title: "Skinicism is only sin deep." Buckley seemed to be having so much fun, no matter how dark and difficult his positions could be, such as his magazine‘s early support of segregation or his defense of Joe McCarthy.