Humour
Sorunu sor hemen cevaplansın.
humour teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- mizah {i}
Örnek Cümle:
O kitabı yazan kişi hem mizah hem de ince espriye sahiptir, değil mi?
-The person who wrote that book is possessed of both humour and wit, isn't he?
Örnek Cümle:
Onun mizahı çok duygusuz.
-His humour is very deadpan.
- halet-i ruhiye
- güldürmek
- hümor (Tıp)
- eğlendirmek
- gülmece
- gönlünü yapmak
- huyuna suyuna gitmek
- komiklik
- mizaç
- istediğini yerine getirmek
- güldürü
- huy
- gülünçlük
- espri anlayışı {i}
Örnek Cümle:
Tom'un asıl problemi onun espri anlayışının olmamasıdır.
-Tom's main problem is he has no sense of humour.
Örnek Cümle:
Almanların espri anlayışı yok mu? Bunu komik bulmuyorum!
-Germans have no sense of humour? I don't find that funny!
- hoşnut et
- salgı {i}
- mizah, karikatür sitesinden çok sayıda sanatsal karikatürü ücretsiz indirebilir, kullanabilirsiniz
- ruh hali {i}
- memnun etmek {f}
- keyif {i}
- hoşuna gitmek {f}
- espri {i}
Örnek Cümle:
O kitabı yazan kişi hem mizah hem de ince espriye sahiptir, değil mi?
-The person who wrote that book is possessed of both humour and wit, isn't he?
Örnek Cümle:
Almanların espri anlayışı yok mu? Bunu komik bulmuyorum!
-Germans have no sense of humour? I don't find that funny!
- alttan almak {f}
- mizah,v.eğlendir: n.mizah
- şaka {i}
- ayak uydurmak {f}
- suyuk/huy/şakacılık
- i., f., İng., bak. humor
- suyuna gitmek {f}
- neşe {i}
- humor
- {i} mizah
Tom kesinlikle mizah duygusuna sahip gibi görünüyor.
-Tom certainly seems to have a sense of humor.
Ne yazık ki Mary mizah duygusuna sahip değil.
-It's a pity that Mary has no sense of humor.
- humour magazine
- mizah dergisi
- humor
- espri
Ne yazık ki onun espri anlayışı yok.
-It is a pity that he has no sense of humor.
O espri ile öyle söyledi.
-He said so with humor.
- humor
- {f} suyuna gitmek
- humor
- safra balgam veya sevda salgısı
- humor
- {i} mizaç
- humor
- suyuk
- humor
- şaka
- humor
- gülünçlük
- humor
- eğlendirmek
- humor
- kaprisine boyun eğmek
- sense of humour
- mizah gücü
- good humour
- hoş mizaç
- good humour
- şakacılık
- humor
- bkz.humour
- humor
- {f} eğlendir
Onları eğlendirsek iyi olur.
-We'd better humor them.
Onu eğlendirsek iyi olur.
-We'd better humor him.
- sense of humour
- mizah anlayışı
- sense of humour
- espri anlayışı
- Vitreous Humour
- Gözmerceğinin ardında göz küresini dolduran jelimsi doku
- aqueous humour
- Kornea ve gözmerceği arasındaki göz sıvısı
- black humour
- kara mizah
- black humour
- iç karartıcı mizah
- gallows humour
- kara mizah
- good humour
- İyi mizah
- good sense of humour
- iyi bir espri anlayışı
- good sense of humour
- iyi bir mizah anlayışı var
- have a good sense of humour
- İyi bir mizah anlayışına sahip olmak
- have a sense of humour
- bir mizah duygusu var
- ill-humour
- kötü espri
- out of humour
- canı sıkkın
- vitreous humour
- vitreus
- dry humour
- (Fiili Deyim ) gülmeden yapılan nüktecilik
- humor
- huy
- humor
- neşe
Tom'u neşelendirsek iyi olur.
-We'd better humor Tom.
- humor
- alttan almak
- humor
- hoşuna gitmek
- humor
- mizah karikatür sitesinden çok sayıda sanatsal karikatürü ücretsiz indirebilir, kullanabilirsiniz
- humor
- {i} salgı
- humor
- keyif
Son birkaç gündür Jane sessiz ve keyifsizdir.
-For the past few days Jane has been quiet and out of humor.
- humor
- memnun etmek
- humor
- ruh hali
- humor
- {i} nüktedanlık
- humor
- sivilce
- humor
- nüktelilik
- humor
- komiklik
- humor
- mizaç huy
- humor
- {i} kapris
- humor
- {i} espri anlayışı
Öğretmenimizin harika bir espri anlayışı var.
-Our teacher has a wonderful sense of humor.
Tom espri anlayışım olmadığını söyledi.
-Tom said I had no sense of humor.
- humor
- tabiat
- humor
- eski fizyolojide kan
- humor
- güIünçlük
- humor
- güldürü
- humor
- ayak uydurmak
- humor
- hılt
- humoured
- mizaçlı
- unfounded humour
- asılsız söylenti
- vitreous humour
- (Anatomi,Teknik) (gözde) camsı cisim
İlgili Terimler
humour teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Either of the two regions of liquid within the eyeball, the aqueous humour and vitreous humour
- To pacify by indulging
Örnek Cümle:
I know you don't believe my story, but humour me for a minute and imagine it to be true.
- Any of the fluids in an animal body, especially the four "cardinal humours" of blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body
Örnek Cümle:
For some days a fistula lacrymalis had come into my left eye, which discharged an humour, when pressed, that portended danger.
- The quality in events, speech or writing which is seen as funny, or creates amusement, such as a joke, satire, parody, etc
- Moist vapour, moisture
- One's state of mind or disposition; one's mood
Örnek Cümle:
He was in a particularly vile humour that afternoon.
- the quality of being funny; "I fail to see the humor in it"
- put into a good mood
- Humour is a quality in something that makes you laugh, for example in a situation, in someone's words or actions, or in a book or film. She felt sorry for the man but couldn't ignore the humour of the situation
- a characteristic (habitual or relatively temporary) state of feeling; "whether he praised or cursed me depended on his temper at the time"; "he was in a bad humor"
- the liquid parts of the body
- You can refer to the amusing things that people say as their humour. Her humour and determination were a source of inspiration to others. see also sense of humour
- A mood
- Four "fluids" that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body - blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm
- the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
- If you do something with good humour, you do it cheerfully and pleasantly. Hugo bore his illness with great courage and good humour
- hu·mour humours humouring humoured in AM, use humor
- a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter
- If you humour someone who is behaving strangely, you try to please them or pretend to agree with them, so that they will not become upset. She disliked Dido but was prepared to tolerate her for a weekend in order to humour her husband. humor to do what someone wants or to pretend to agree with them so that they do not become upset. (Latin; "fluid") In early Western physiological theory, one of the four body fluids thought to determine a person's temperament and features. As hypothesized by Galen, the four cardinal humours were blood, phlegm, choler (yellow bile), and melancholy (black bile). The variant mixture of these humours in each person determined his "complexion" or temperament and his mental and physical qualities. The ideal person had the perfectly proportioned mixture of the four fluids; a disproportionate amount of one humour created a personality dominated by one set of related emotions (e.g., a choleric man was easily angered, proud, ambitious, and vengeful). black humour seminal fluid cerebrospinal fluid fluid mechanics
- If you are in a good humour, you feel cheerful and happy, and are pleasant to people. If you are in a bad humour, you feel bad-tempered and unhappy, and are unpleasant to people. Christina was still not clear why he had been in such ill humour = temper
- humor, quality of being amusing or entertaining, comedy; ability to appreciate or express something amusing; mood, state of mind, disposition; body fluid (Physiology) {i}
- Something funny such as a joke, satire, parody, etc
- pamper, indulge, favor, oblige (also humor) {f}
- (Middle Ages) one of the four fluids in the body whose balance was believed to determine your emotional and physical state; "the humors are blood and phlegm and yellow and black bile"
- aqueous humour
- The clear, watery fluid that fills the front of the eye between the cornea and the vitreous humour
- black humour
- Alternative spelling of black humor
- dry humour
- Alternative spelling of dry humor
- gallows humour
- Alternative spelling of gallows humor
- humor
- : To pacify by indulging
I know you don't believe my story, but humor me for a minute and imagine it to be true.
- humor
- Four fluids (blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm) that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body
For some days a fistula lacrymalis had come into my left eye, which discharged an humour, when pressed, that portended danger.
- humor
- Either of the two regions of liquid within the eyeball, the aqueous humour and vitreous humour
- humor
- Something funny, e.g. a joke, satire, or parody
He treated the sensitive subject with enough humor that no one was offended.
- sense of humour
- The quality of an individual to find certain things funny
- senses of humour
- plural form of sense of humour
- toilet humour
- A scatological or vulgar phrase intended to be amusing
- vitreous humour
- The clear gel that fills the eyeball between the lens and the retina
- humor
- {n} moisture, droollery, whim, caprice
- humor
- {v} to gratify, sooth, comply with, oblige
- aqueous humour
- 1. the limpid fluid within the eyeball between the cornea and the lens
- vitreous humour
- The transparent jelly-like tissue filling the eyeball behind the lens
- black humour
- jokes or funny stories that deal with the unpleasant parts of human life. Humour marked by the use of morbid, ironic, or grotesquely comic episodes that ridicule human folly. The term came into common use in the 1960s to describe the work of novelists such as Joseph Heller, whose Catch-22 (1961) is an outstanding example; Kurt Vonnegut, particularly in Slaughterhouse Five (1969); and Thomas Pynchon, in V (1963) and Gravity's Rainbow (1973). A film exemplar is Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove (1963). The term black comedy has been applied to some playwrights in the Theatre of the Absurd, especially Eugène Ionesco
- gallows humour
- gallows humor humour which makes very unpleasant or dangerous things seem funny
- good humour
- a cheerful and agreeable mood
- good humour
- a happy, friendly character or attitude to life
- humor
- A mood, especially a bad mood
- humor
- State of mind, whether habitual or temporary (as formerly supposed to depend on the character or combination of the fluids of the body); disposition; temper; mood; as, good humor; ill humor
- humor
- put into a good mood
- humor
- To pacify by indulging
- humor
- (Middle Ages) one of the four fluids in the body whose balance was believed to determine your emotional and physical state; "the humors are blood and phlegm and yellow and black bile"
- humor
- the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
- humor
- the liquid parts of the body
- humor
- {i} quality of being amusing or entertaining, comedy; ability to appreciate or express something amusing; mood, state of mind, disposition; body fluid (Physiology)
- humor
- To help on by indulgence or compliant treatment; to soothe; to gratify; to please
- humor
- the quality of being funny; "I fail to see the humor in it"
- humor
- Moisture, especially, the moisture or fluid of animal bodies, as the chyle, lymph, etc
- humor
- a characteristic (habitual or relatively temporary) state of feeling; "whether he praised or cursed me depended on his temper at the time"; "he was in a bad humor"
- humor
- To comply with the humor of; to adjust matters so as suit the peculiarities, caprices, or exigencies of; to adapt one's self to; to indulge by skillful adaptation; as, to humor the mind
- humor
- Changing and uncertain states of mind; caprices; freaks; vagaries; whims
- humor
- as, the humors of the eye, etc
- humor
- a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter
- humor
- That quality of the imagination which gives to ideas an incongruous or fantastic turn, and tends to excite laughter or mirth by ludicrous images or representations; a playful fancy; facetiousness
- humor
- A vitiated or morbid animal fluid, such as often causes an eruption on the skin
- humor
- {f} pamper, indulge, favor, oblige (also humour)
- humoured
- past of humour
- humouring
- present participle of humour
- humours
- plural of humour
- ill humour
- an angry and disagreeable mood
- sense of humour
- the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
- sense of humour
- sense of hu·mour in AM, use sense of humor Someone who has a sense of humour often finds things amusing, rather than being serious all the time. He had enormous charm and a great sense of humour
İlgili Terimler
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