HUMOROUS vs TRAGICOMIC: ADJECTIVE
- Full of or characterized by humor; funny.
- Employing or showing humor; witty.
- Given to moods or whims; capricious.
- Damp; moist.
- Moist; humid; watery.
- Full of or characterized by humor
- Full of humor; jocular; exciting laughter; playful
- Full of humor or arousing laughter; funny.
- Showing humor; witty, jocular.
- Damp or watery.
- Dependent on or caused by one's humour or mood; capricious, whimsical.
- Subject to be governed by humor or caprice; irregular; capricious; whimsical.
- Having pathetic as well as ludicrous characteristics
- Manifesting both tragic and comic aspects
- Of or relating to or characteristic of tragicomedy
- Of, pertaining to, or resembling tragicomedy in having both tragic and comic aspects.
HUMOROUS vs TRAGICOMIC: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Moist; humid.
- Prone to be moved by humor or caprice; whimsical; crotchety.
- Characterized by or full of humor; exciting laughter; comical; diverting; funny: as, a humorous story or author.
- Synonyms Facetious, jocose, witty, droll.
- N/A
HUMOROUS vs TRAGICOMIC: RELATED WORDS
- Facetious, Slapstick, Jocular, Comic, Uproarious, Mirthful, Zany, Droll, Wry, Amusing, Witty, Funny, Comical, Hilarious, Humourous
- Slapstick, Droll, Heartrending, Tragic, Satiric, Picaresque, Poignant, Comical, Melodramatic, Absurdist, Seriocomic, Farcical, Sad, Humourous, Humorous
HUMOROUS vs TRAGICOMIC: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Facetious, Slapstick, Jocular, Comic, Uproarious, Mirthful, Zany, Droll, Wry, Amusing, Witty, Funny, Comical, Hilarious, Humourous
- Slapstick, Droll, Heartrending, Tragic, Satiric, Picaresque, Poignant, Comical, Melodramatic, Absurdist, Seriocomic, Farcical, Sad, Humourous, Humorous
HUMOROUS vs TRAGICOMIC: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- It was quite interesting and humorous as well.
- This game tends to be polarizing and humorous!
- Zombies can be humorous and drop dead funny.
- And the situations are sometimes humorous as well.
- Leonard does not find him humorous, but does find the fact that Sheldon thinks he is funny humorous.
- Humorous songs, or songs containing humorous elements, are not necessarily novelty songs.
- Humorous Interp: This is an individual category in which the selections are humorous in nature.
- If the manuscript you are marketing is humorous, the query should be humorous.
- The pips have humorous faces and there is a humorous saying or motto on every card.
- The humorous speech contest showed we have a depth of witty and humorous toastmasters.
- The various neuroses of each member of this extended clan are so human, so relatable, that their interactions are automatically hilarious and tragicomic.
- This is a tragicomic novel of the bleakest order, a succinct summary of life as an immigrant with barely a word wasted.
- Whether or not there exists any autobiographical chain, the Concerto for Clarinet captivatingly reflects the bittersweet, tragicomic fullness of life.
- Scholars have often understood these bawdy, sexualised dramas as existing somewhere between, synthesising the two forms to be essentially tragicomic in nature.
- Whimsical and dark, they mirror tragicomic characters doomed to repeat themselves, with a sensitive intelligence reminiscent of Edward Gorey.
- When Herman invites them for a short holiday, a tragicomic triangular relationship ensues.
- See Danny Schechter's 2003 film "Counting on Democracy," where you can revisit that tragicomic episode.
HUMOROUS vs TRAGICOMIC: QUESTIONS
- What is a humorous exchange between Kira and Cagalli?
- What are the benefits of humorous Appeals in advertising?
- What is the most humorous quote from 'Gilmore Girls'?
- Should you make humorous jokes at love or marriage?
- Who collects humorous postcards of camp life in WWI?
- Who makes humorous in-flight announcements to airline passengers?
- What are some of your favourite humorous postcards?
- Which is the correct spelling humourous or humorous?
- Who wrote the best American humorous short stories?
- Does humorous zombie material improve preparedness?
- Is American factory a tragicomic story of Culture Clash?
- Which modern playwright often employed the tragicomic form?