Anonymous ID: bb200a Jan. 4, 2022, 9:58 p.m. No.15311641   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15311616

The guy on the left represents "the left" and the guy on the right represents "the right." What we see here is what happens when "the left" insists on messing with "the right."

Anonymous ID: bb200a Jan. 4, 2022, 10:38 p.m. No.15311784   🗄️.is 🔗kun

As you requested:

 

hu·mor

/ˈ(h)yoomər/

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noun

noun: humour; noun: humor; noun: cardinal humour; plural noun: cardinal humours; noun: cardinal humor; plural noun: cardinal humors

1.

the quality of being amusing or comic, especially as expressed in literature or speech.

"his tales are full of humor"

Similar:

comical aspect

comic side

funny side

comedy

funniness

hilarity

jocularity

absurdity

absurdness

ludicrousness

drollness

facetiousness

satire

irony

Opposite:

seriousness

2.

a mood or state of mind.

"her good humor vanished"

Similar:

mood

temper

disposition

temperament

frame of mind

state of mind

spirits

3.

HISTORICAL

each of the four chief fluids of the body (blood, phlegm, yellow bile (choler), and black bile (melancholy)) that were thought to determine a person's physical and mental qualities by the relative proportions in which they were present.

verb

verb: humour; 3rd person present: humours; past tense: humoured; past participle: humoured; gerund or present participle: humouring; verb: humor; 3rd person present: humors; past tense: humored; past participle: humored; gerund or present participle: humoring

comply with the wishes of (someone) in order to keep them content, however unreasonable such wishes might be.

"she was always humoring him to prevent trouble"

Similar:

indulge

pander to

yield to

bow to

cater to

give way to

give in to

go along with

comply with

adapt to

accommodate

pamper

spoil

overindulge

cosset

coddle

mollycoddle

mollify

soothe

placate

gratify

satisfy

Opposite:

stand up to

Phrases

out of humor — in a bad mood.

Origin

 

Middle English: via Old French from Latin humor ‘moisture’, from humere (see humid). The original sense was ‘bodily fluid’ (surviving in aqueous humour and vitreous humour ); it was used specifically for any of the cardinal humors (humor (sense 3 of the noun)), whence ‘mental disposition’ (thought to be caused by the relative proportions of the humors). This led, in the 16th century, to the senses ‘mood’ (humor (sense 2 of the noun)) and ‘whim’, hence to humour someone ‘to indulge a person's whim’. humor (sense 1 of the noun) dates from the late 16th century.

Translate humor to

Use over time for: humor

 

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