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Our Word for Wednesday theme for November is other words for funny.
If something is funny, it means that it provokes laughter. The word has been used in English since 1756 and comes from the word ‘fun-‘ and the suffix ‘-y'. 'Fun' comes from the Middle English ‘fonnen’ meaning ‘befool’.
Over November we’ve looked at the words amusing, droll, hilarious. and silly. Our final funny word of the month is witty.
If something is witty, it means it is characterised by quick and inventive verbal humour
Here is witty used in some example sentences:
They exchanged a witty back-and-forth.&nbs...
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This month's English vocabulary lists were words ending in 'cle', -ey words, and 10 Words for … COLD. Have you tried our new COOL SPELLING game? Listen to the words and collect the icicles to spell them. Beware of enemies!
Are some of your students making slower progress than you’d hoped? Or being reassigned units they’ve completed before? To get the best out of the Spellzone experience, we recommend that students complete a range of Learn the Words activities before moving onto course tests.
How many of these 5 classroom ideas have you tried at your school? If you use Spellz...
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Our Word for Wednesday theme for November is other words for funny.
If something is funny, it means that it provokes laughter. The word has been used in English since 1756 and comes from the word ‘fun-‘ and the suffix ‘-y'. 'Fun' comes from the Middle English ‘fonnen’ meaning ‘befool’.
Over the last few weeks, we’ve looked at the words amusing, droll, and hilarious. This week’s word is silly.
If something is silly, it means it is funny in a foolish or frivolous way.
Here is silly used in some example sentences:
The joke was silly but I couldn’t stop laughing.
She wore a silly hat t...
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Our Word for Wednesday theme for November is other words for funny.
If something is funny, it means that it provokes laughter. The word has been used in English since 1756 and comes from the word ‘fun-‘ and the suffix ‘-y'. 'Fun' comes from the Middle English ‘fonnen’ meaning ‘befool’.
So far we’ve looked at the words amusing and droll. This week’s word is hilarious.
If something is hilarious, it means it is extremely funny.
Did you watch the hilarious video of the goat that sounds like a screaming man?
They couldn’t stop laughing at the comedian’s hilarious jokes.
Hi...
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Our Word for Wednesday theme for November is other words for funny.
If something is funny, it means that it provokes laughter. The word has been used in English since 1756 and comes from the word ‘fun-‘ and the suffix ‘-y'. 'Fun' comes from the Middle English ‘fonnen’ meaning ‘befool’.
Last week we looked at the word amusing and today’s word is droll. If something is droll, it means it is funny in an unexpected and dry way.
Here is droll used in some example sentences:
He enjoyed droll satire.
Her expression was droll when she told him he was her hero.
Droll dates to the 1620s and come...
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amusing – providing enjoyment or provoking laughter
She told an amusing joke.
comic – arousing or provoking laughter, related to comedy
The actor had great comic timing.
droll – comic in an unexpected and dry way
He enjoyed droll satire.
farcical – extravagantly and absurdly funny, like a farce
She had to laugh at the farcical turn of events.
hilarious – extremely funny
Did you watch the hilarious video?
humorous – funny, causing laughter
The film was humorous.
riotous – extremely funny, causing wild and out-of-control laug...
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