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humour  
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KK:[ˈhjumɚ] DJ:[ˈhjuːmǝ]
權威釋義

  1. = humor

參見

humor

n.

  1. 幽默感[U]
  2. 幽默[U]
  3. 心情,情緒[S]
  4. 氣質,性情[U]

vt.

  1. 迎合;遷就

辨析

同義參見:

content1 blood kidney

以上來源於:《英漢大辭典》


n.

  1. the quality of being amusing, especially as expressed in literature or speech.
    ▸the ability to appreciate or express humour.
  2. a state of mind:
    archaic an inclination or whim.
  3. (also cardinal humour) historical each of four fluids of the body (blood, phlegm, yellow bile or choler, and black bile or melancholy), formerly thought to determine a person's physical and mental qualities.

v.

comply with the wishes or whims of.

Phrase

  • out of humour
    in a bad mood.

Derivative

  • humourless adj.
  • humourlessly adv.
  • humourlessness n.

History

The word humour entered English from Old French in the 14th century. Ultimately it comes from Latin humor ‘moisture’, from humere ‘be moist’ (humid is from the same root). The original sense in English was ‘bodily fluid’, surviving today in the medical terms aqueous humour and vitreous humour, fluids present in the eyeball. In the Middle Ages it was believed that the relative proportions of the four bodily fluids known as the cardinal humours, namely blood, phlegm, choler, and melancholy, affected a person's general physical and mental health. This idea led, in the 16th century, to the use of humour in the senses ‘mood’ and ‘whim’, with the current primary sense becoming established by the end of that century.

以上來源於:《簡明牛津英語詞典》