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单词 comedy
释义

comedyn.1

Brit. /ˈkɒmᵻdi/, U.S. /ˈkɑmədi/
Forms: Middle English–1600s comedie, Middle English–1600s comedye, Middle English–1700s commedy, Middle English– comedy, 1500s commodye, 1500s–1600s comaedie, 1500s–1600s commedie, 1500s–1600s commodie, 1500s–1600s comodie, 1500s–1600s comody, 1500s–1600s comoedie, 1500s–1600s comoedy, 1600s comaedy, 1600s commerdy, 1600s commoedye, 1600s comoedye; also Scottish pre-1700 comode.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French comedie; Latin cōmoedia.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman and Middle French comedie, Middle French commedie, commedye (French comédie ) satirical poem (c1370), drama, especially one with a happy ending (c1370; c1150 in Anglo-Norman in uncertain sense, perhaps ‘the genre of drama or literature which consists of comedies’), and its etymon (ii) classical Latin cōmoedia comic form of drama or literature, comic play < ancient Greek κωμῳδία comic form of drama or literature, comic play, also in figurative use, with reference to real life < κωμῳδός singer in the comic chorus, in Hellenistic Greek also comic actor, comic poet ( < κῶμος revel, merrymaking, band of revellers, ode sung at a festive procession, of uncertain origin + ἀοιδός singer, minstrel < ἀείδειν to sing: see ode n.) + -ία -y suffix3. Compare Catalan comèdia (14th cent.), Spanish comedia (c1280), Portuguese comédia (16th cent.), Italian commedia dramatic work in verse or prose with a happy ending (beginning of the 14th cent. as †comedia ), farcical or funny incident (1553). The Latin noun was also borrowed into other Germanic languages; compare Dutch komedie (1548 as †comedie ), Middle Low German cōmȫdie , commēdie , German Komödie (late 17th cent. as †comœdie , 15th cent. as †comedy and (with Latin inflectional endings) †comedia ), all earliest in sense 2b. Compare tragedy n.In the specific use with reference to Dante's work (see sense 2a) after Italian commedia (beginning of the 14th cent. in La commedia, the original title of Dante's Divine Comedy). Dante called his epic poem La commedia because, although treating a serious subject (the redemption of humanity), it was written in a ‘low’ style and in the vernacular language rather than in an elevated style and in Latin, and because it had a happy ending (with the Beatific Vision in Paradiso, its third part).
1. The genre of drama or literature which consists of comedies (in sense 2); comedies considered as a class. Later also: the style or genre of entertainment consisting of jokes, comedy sketches, etc., and intended to make an audience laugh. Also personified. Opposed to tragedy n. 2.Ancient Greek comedy is conventionally divided into three phases: Old Comedy, Middle Comedy, and New Comedy (see old adj. Compounds 4, middle adj. and n. Compounds 1a, new adj. and n. Compounds 2a).low comedy, Restoration comedy, screwball comedy, situation comedy, stand-up comedy, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > [noun] > comedy
comedya1387
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 315 Þere [i.e. in Sicily] was commedy [L. comoedia], a song of gestes, firste i-founde.
1579 in tr. Eunapius Lyves of Philosophers f. 9 v The skipping of flees, and dauncing of Clowdes, and such other toyes..which Commedy is wont to deuice for pastime.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Apol. Poetrie (1595) sig. F3 The Comedy is an imitation of the common errors of our life.
1616 B. Jonson Every Man in his Humor (rev. ed.) Prol. in Wks. I. 5 Persons, such as Comœdie would chuse, When she would shew an Image of the times, And sport with humane follies, not with crimes.
1679 J. Dryden Troilus & Cressida Pref. sig. a2 Tragedy..ought to be great, and to consist of great Persons, to distinguish it from Comedy; where the Action is trivial, and the persons of inferior rank.
1704 J. Addison Remarks on Italy: Venice 100 Their Poets have no notion of genteel Comedy.
1759 O. Goldsmith Bee 6 Oct. 12 There is hardly a character in comedy to which a player of any real humour, might not add strokes of vivacity that could not fail of applause.
1842 T. De Quincey Shakspeare in Encycl. Brit. XX. 172/2 Beaumont and Fletcher, when writing in combination..had a freedom and breadth of manner which excels the comedy of Shakspeare.
1899 Nation (N.Y.) 28 Sept. 244/3 In Tragedy you weep at the misfortunes of your neighbor; in Comedy, you laugh at his mischances or his follies.
1903 Proc. 42nd Ann. Convent. Ont. Educ. Assoc. 155 Comedy has perhaps allied itself most commonly to satire.
1996 Eastern Eye 14 June 14/1 Why on earth has it taken so long for Asians to smash through comedy's glass ceiling?
2009 Financial Times 24 Oct. (Life & Arts section) 19/5 Good, original comedy on a Saturday night is vanishingly rare.
2.
a. In the Middle Ages: a narrative poem intended to entertain the hearer or reader and having a happy ending. In later use chiefly with reference to or in the title of Dante's Divine Comedy. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [noun] > other types of narrative poem
comedya1413
tragica1679
lai1774
fabliau1804
dream poem1850
parable-poem1884
dream vision1906
corrido1911
toast1962
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1882) v. l. 1788 Go litel bok, go litel myn Tregedie, Ther god þi makere yet er þat he dye, So sende myght to make yn som comedye.
c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) ii. l. 847 (MED) A comedie hath in his gynnyng, At prime face, a maner compleynyng, And afterward endeth in gladnes.
c1525 J. Rastell (title) A new commodye in englysh.
1674 T. Rymer tr. R. Rapin Refl. Aristotle's Treat. Poesie 99 The Poem of Dante, which the Italians of those days, call'd a Comedy, passes for an Epick Poem in the opinion of Castelvetro.
1774 T. Warton Hist. Eng. Poetry I. vi. 234 The nature and subject of Dante's comedies, as they are styled, is well known.
1899 F. J. Snell Fourteenth Cent. vi. 299 Chaucer..expresses the hope that God will vouchsafe that he may compose, ere he dies, some comedy.
1921 Stud. Philol. 18 401 Dante's..Comedy [is] the most perfect of all comedies in that its curve of amelioration rises from the absolute zero of damnation..to the maximum of blessedness attainable in this life.
1982 F. N. Magill Crit. Surv. Poetry II. 485 Like Dante's The Divine Comedy..Chaucer's comedy symbolically moves from the infernal to the heavenly.
b. A drama written in a light, amusing, or satirical style and having a happy or conciliatory ending. More generally: any literary composition or entertainment which portrays amusing characters or incidents and is intended to elicit laughter. Opposed to tragedy n. 1bOriginally with reference to Greek or Roman comedies. Nicholas Udall's Ralph Roister Doister (cf. quot. a1556) is generally considered to be the first English comedy, and the genre was established in Elizabethan theatres. Comedies from this period typically feature ordinary characters (as opposed to the elevated protagonists of tragedy) who encounter or create amusing difficulties which are finally happily resolved, often through marriage.romantic comedy, screwball comedy, situation comedy, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > a written composition > [noun] > comic or humorous
comedy1523
merriment1697
comicality1728
humoristics1886
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > [noun] > comedy > anc. Greek or Roman
comedy1523
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > a comedy
comedy1523
farce1530
interlude?1553
merriment1576
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > other types of poem > [noun] > humorous or burlesque poem
comedy1523
1523 J. Skelton Goodly Garlande of Laurell sig. Bv Mayster Terence the famous conucar [1568 comicar] with plautus that wrote full many a comody.
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xiii. sig. Gij Therence and other that were writers of comedies.
a1556 N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister (?1566) Prol. sig. A.ij Our Comedie or Enterlude which we intende to play. Is named Royster Doyster in deede.
1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 177 Homer in his Comedy of the fight betwixt Frogs and Mise.
1620 I. C. Two Merry Milke-maids v. i. sig. P2v Your Cheeks are like a good Comedy, worthy to bee clapt.
1632 R. Brome (title) The northern lasse a comoedie. As it hath beene often Acted with good Applause, at the Globe, and Black-Fryers.
1683 W. Kennett tr. Erasmus Witt against Wisdom 38 The world is nothing else but such another Comedy.., all things being in a masque, and particular disguise.
1738 London Mag. Nov. 548/1 In several Comedies, the Clown and the Man of Parts are no otherwise to be distinguished, than by what is furnish'd out of the Wardrobe.
1771 Gen. Evening Post 19 Nov. The plot of this comedy is contrived with great ingenuity, and is pleasingly intricate.
1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto III ix. 7 All comedies are ended by a marriage.
1894 North Amer. (Philadelphia) 25 Sept. 2/5 ‘My Aunt Bridget’ is a comedy that is continually bubbling over with humorous situations.
1930 Times 20 Jan. 10/2 At the Court Theatre to-night Mr. Charles Macdona will revive Mr. Bernard Shaw's comedy The Philanderer.
1990 N.Y. Mag. 14 May 125/1 The author of Prelude, is trying to write..a sophisticated New York comedy, for which he isn't sophisticated enough.
2005 Broadcasting & Cable 11 July 15/3 Arrested Development isn't just the best comedy on television right now; it's one of the best ever.
c. A mystery play, morality play, or interlude with a happy ending. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > mystery or miracle play > type of
guaryc1450
comedy1530
passion1823
passion play1850
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 207/1 Commedy of a christmas playe, commedie.
1538 J. Bale (title) A brefe comedy or enterlude concernynge the temptacyon of our lorde and sauer Jesus Christ by Sathan in the desart.
1568 (title) A newe mery and wittie comedie or enterlude..treating vpon the historie of Iacob and Esau.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost v. ii. 462 Here was a consent, Knowing aforehand of our meriment, To dash it lik a Christmas Comedie . View more context for this quotation
1616 J. Bullokar Eng. Expositor Comedie, a play, or interlude the beginning of which is ever full of troubles and the end joyfull.
1864 Ladies' Compan. 25 194/1 The term Interlude was loosely used as a general name for any kind of play, Mystery or Mortality, Tragedy or Comedy.
3. A funny or farcical incident, action, or predicament; esp. one that involves confusion, misunderstanding, or mistaken identity. Also as a mass noun.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > one who or that which is comical
comedy1535
toy1542
jest1602
joke1670
comic1674
high comedy1707
humorous1753
comicality1796
funny1852
funniosity1871
hot sketch1917
pisser1918
riot1919
panic1921
cocasserie1934
yell1938
mess1952
crack-up1961
1535 R. Layton Let. in T. Wright Three Chapters Lett. Suppression Monasteries (1843) 76 To tell yowe all this commodie, but for thabbot a tragedie, hit were to long.
1592 G. Harvey Foure Lett. 9 They..can relate straunge and almost incredible comedies of his monstrous disposition.
1631 T. May tr. J. Barclay Mirrour of Mindes ii. 164 Willing to continue this Comædy, he answered smilingly he had but two horses.
1709 A. Pope Corr. 29 Aug. (1956) I. 71 Here is a glorious Standing Comedy of Fools.
1870 Putnam's Mag. May 583/1 Any attempt at conversation with Alberino was sure to lead to a perfect comedy of misunderstandings.
1956 J. Baldwin Giovanni's Room ii. iv. 204 The comedy you are playing with the short-haired, moon-faced little girl is love.
1978 B. Arnold Singer at Wedding v. 124 The comedy cheered me briefly. There was a brisk, wholesome vulgarity to the absurd events.
2010 K. Richards & J. Fox Life i. 15 Now we have total comedy..as the judge takes to his bench and the various lawyers and cops try to get him to follow their versions of the law.
4. Humour; humorous invention; the action or quality of being funny or amusing.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > humour
humour?1663
facete1808
comedy1877
1877 G. Meredith in New Q. Mag. 8 9 Comedy is the fountain of sound sense.
1899 Nation 30 Nov. 413/3 [Stephen] Crane..is humorous, and has a strong sense for comedy both in situation and in character.
1947 Life 14 Apr. 65/1 Morgan..believes that his comedy, as all good comedy should be, is drawn from human foibles.
1990 M. Angelou I shall not be Moved 4 Some of us are serious, some thrive on comedy.
2012 N. Tredell C. P. Snow ii. 34 The comic portrayal of the official agent of the law [is]..the first example in Snow's novels of his underrated talent for comedy.

Phrases

comedy of manners n. a type of comedy which depicts the manners, habits, or affectations of society or a social class humorously or satirically.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > [noun] > comedy > specific
low comedy1608
farce1676
light comedy1698
high comedy1707
comedy of manners1822
comedietta1823
Adelphi screamer1830
commedia dell'arte1877
musical comedy1903
comédie noire1958
alternative comedy1980
1822 C. Lamb in London Mag. Apr. 305/1 The artificial Comedy, or Comedy of manners, is quite extinct on our stage.
1913 J. Palmer Comedy of Manners i. 2 The English comedy of manners began with Etherege..and was finally extinguished in Sheridan and Goldsmith.
1951 Times Lit. Suppl. 26 Jan. 49/3 Mrs. Strachey's third novel is..a comedy of manners in which sharp observation of human behaviour and shrewd understanding of human motives are overlaid by an air of inconsequence and frivolous charm.
2013 Financial Times (U.S. ed.) 8 Aug. 9/2 The play is..full of sharp observations of social mores, yet not content to be a mere comedy of manners.

Compounds

C1. General attributive, as comedy act, comedy actor, comedy opera, comedy player, comedy series, comedy troupe, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > actor > [noun]
playera1400
game-player1533
comedy player1550
stage-player1561
actor1566
histrion?1566
comediant1568
representer1579
stager1580
presentera1586
histrio1589
stageman1589
gamester1596
player-man1596
Roscius1600
stagerite1602
theaterian1602
comedian1603
scenic1612
representant1622
play-actor1633
parta1643
histrionic1647
representator1653
artist1714
mummer1773
actor-manager1826
Thespian1827
impersonator1830
personifier1835
player-manager1895
thesp1962
luvvie1988
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > actor > [noun] > actor in specific type of play
comedy player1550
tragedy player1552
comediant1568
tragic1577
tragedian1590
comedian1603
comic1619
interludera1627
pastorista1627
tragicomediana1627
tragedy actor1690
low comedian1740
tragedy man1784
exodiary1793
farcer1813
monopolylogist1830
stock actor1839
beneficiaire1841
monologuist1853
monologist1858
burlesquer1869
opera-bouffer1870
low comedy1885
knockabout1887
farceur1889
folk-player1936
1550 R. Sherry Treat. Schemes & Tropes sig. B.iiii Cicero vsed thys kynde in hys philosophicall disputacions, in the oracion for Quincius for Roscius ye Comedy plaier.
1735 Proc. Old Bailey 10 Dec. 14/2 I am a Dresser in the House, under a Comedy player.
1837 B. D. Walsh tr. Aristophanes Clouds i. iv, in Comedies 297 Don't strain after jests, or attempt to perform The Comedy-clown.
1862 Frank Leslie's Illustr. Newspaper 22 Nov. 139/2 ‘Speed the Plough’..is, probably, the best acted piece of the comedy series yet presented to the public.
1871 Pall Mall Gaz. 25 May 11/2Comedy-dramas’, ‘comedy-operas’, and other hybrid designations have lately figured in the playbills.
1899 Smith College Monthly May 364 Ragueneau, the poetic and soft-hearted pastry-cook, affords a good opportunity for a comedy actor.
1929 Daily Express 12 Jan. 3/5 New comedy acts are needed most.
1952 Life 12 May 98 Jerome Robbins..rose from the chorus to become a star comedy dancer.
1995 New Musical Express 28 Oct. 50/6 BBC TV's popular comedy series of French Resistance folk, 'Allo 'Allo.
1997 Theatre July 8/2 I think a lot of people do see me more as a comedy actress than a serious actress.
2005 Northern Echo 8 Oct. 10/3 He was..one of the most gifted comedy actors to grace our television screens.
C2. With the sense ‘belonging to or characteristic of comedy; humorous, entertaining’, as comedy air, comedy manner, comedy walk, etc.
ΚΠ
1829 La Belle Assemblée Dec. 286/2 His first scene went off with a light comedy air.
1857 Knickerbocker Sept. 252 The lovers went down on their knees in the most approved sterling comedy manner.
1884 Punch 16 Feb. 76/1 Royal Commission doesn't hurt anybody and may please some, though not Noble Lords in comedy dress.
1947 D. Lean in O. Blakeston Working for Films 29 The answer lies in a very old comedy maxim: Tell them what you're going to do. Do it. Tell them you've done it.
1995 T. Iknoian Fitness Walking iv. 35 Overstriding can turn your walk into a bouncing gallop reminiscent of Groucho Marx's comedy gait.
2008 K. Hopkins Star Child (2009) 125 With bent knees, he did a wobbly comedy walk back over to the line.
2011 Guardian 22 July 16/1 The..realistic, hyperobserved comedy style of TV's The Office.
C3.
comedy circuit n. the various venues and events at which (stand-up) comedians regularly perform, esp. as an established itinerary.Recorded earliest in attributive use.
ΚΠ
1951 Films in Rev. Aug. 27/1 In the old days the Marx brothers went on comedy circuit and vaudeville tours.
1960 San Antonio (Texas) Express 8 Jan. 3 b/2 Blackie Sherrod..wouldn't starve to death if he turned from the typewriter to the comedy circuit.
2012 M. Fisher Edinb. Fringe Survival Guide vi. 106 If..you are relatively unknown, you could decide it is futile to compete against the biggest names on the comedy circuit.
comedy club n. (a) an amateur dramatic society specializing in the performance of comedies (now rare); (b) a venue where stand-up comedy is performed.
ΚΠ
1865 Era 19 Mar. 13/1 An amateur performance by the members of the Comedy Club and Birmingham Dramatic Association took place on Monday Evening.
1969 Bridgeport (Connecticut) Sunday Post 16 Nov. b3/2 Members of the Comedy club gathered..last Sunday evening.., when plans were discussed for the next presentation.
1975 Mass Media (Univ. Massachusetts) 18 Mar. 8/1 After performing on the college coffeehouse circuit.., Shaw moved to New York City to ‘cut it’ at The Improvisation and Catch a Rising Star, two premier comedy clubs.
2013 J. Whitehall & M. Whitehall Him & Me iv. xii. 122 If a posh boy can survive in a comedy club in Newcastle on a Saturday night, he can survive anything.
comedy drama n. a theatre, radio, or television drama which combines serious and comic elements.
ΚΠ
1838 Fraser's Mag. Dec. 663/1 It is called a ‘comedy-drama’, and, like Catherine Howard, it is one of the many productions of the Porte St. Martin.
1899 C. Scott Drama of Yesterday & To-day II. xiv. 448 Jane Hading—a failure, comparatively, in silly comic operas, a brilliant success in emotional comedy drama.
1980 Irish Times 15 Oct. 21/1 Light comedy drama episode with Terry Scott and June Whitfield getting a new car and having it stolen all in the same day.
2013 Northern Echo 3 Jan. 24 This four-part comedy drama chronicles the misadventures of a young medic..on the eve of the Russian Revolution.
comedy genius n. (a) instinctive and extraordinary capacity or aptitude for comedy; (b) a person with an exceptional talent or aptitude for comedy.Cf. earlier comic genius n. at comic n. and adj. Compounds 1b.
ΚΠ
1849 Fraser's Mag. Sept. 327/2 Why, this Mr. Puddicombe must be quite a low-comedy genius.]
1886 Lippincott's Monthly Mag. Mar. 295 Tom Johnstone..[played] a part that suited his eccentric comedy genius to perfection.
1887 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 24 Oct. 4/7 Mr Goodwin is a comedy genius.., a fellow of infinite jest, wont to keep the theater in a roar.
1925 Irish Times 20 Oct. 11/7 Dan Leno, junior, showed that he has inherited the comedy genius of his father.
1960 Washington Post 6 Nov. b10/ (headline) Mack Sennett, Comedy Genius.
1993 MacUser Oct. 17/1 What seems like a mindless, grating ramble..is actually a masterstroke of comedy genius.
2010 D. Spikey Under Microscope 194 Tommy is a perfect straight man and Bobby Ball is a comedy genius.
comedy house n. a theatre in which comedies are performed; (now also) a venue for stand-up comedy.
ΚΠ
1669 S. Newton Diary 1 May (1890) 45 They went to the Comedy house where they had a Comedy called Nola.
1849 Theatr. Jrnl. 9 Aug. 246/1 We confess we are sorry at our first comedy house, to see the lessee in the part of Sir Peter Teazle.
1920 Review (N.Y.) 1 May 465/2 The only other London theatre which can be said to have any tradition is the Haymarket—a comedy house.
1993 Orange Coast June 60/2 Top-notch talent keeps this comedy house rocking with laughter.
comedy sketch n. (a) a humorous or satirical depiction of a character (obsolete rare); (b) a short comic play or performance, typically consisting of a single scene in a variety show, theatrical revue, or (now esp.) a television programme.
ΚΠ
1855 Sunday Times 13 May 5/4 An old country squire..and an old lady.., are exquisite comedy sketches.
1874 Era 25 Oct. The addition of a comedy sketch.., to the usual programme, was highly appreciated.
1973 Robesonian (Lumberton, N. Carolina) 25 Mar. 4/4 The 90-minute program will feature comedy sketches, dance routines and song numbers in a revue format.
2008 E. Hanson Bk. of Ages xxvi. 83 A comedy sketch in which a man and a woman trying to order breakfast in a small café are constantly interrupted by Vikings singing about processed meat.
comedy skit n. a short comic performance, esp. one written or improvised on a given theme or subject; a comedy sketch.
ΚΠ
1886 Warren (Pa.) Daily Mirror 1 Oct. Mr. Kendall is the author of the favorite comedy skit ‘We, Us & Co’, which made such a success in Warren last season.
1961 N.Y. Times 21 Apr. 35/2 (heading) Comedy skit on TV brings libel suit.
2013 J. Franco Actors Anonymous 72 I was part of an improv group in college, we did comedy skits and things like that.
comedy thriller n. a dramatic or literary work which combines comedy with elements of the thriller genre (cf. thriller n.).Recorded earliest in attributive use.
ΚΠ
1910 Trenton (New Jersey) Evening Times 1 Apr. 16/5 Pongo and Leo..were the king bees of the show from the way the people in the house applauded their comedy-thriller act.
1937 Manch. Guardian 8 Apr. 10/5 In type it is a ‘comedy thriller’, perhaps the likeliest of any to be a box-office success.
2005 New Statesman 20 June 34 The nine novels of Christopher Brookmyre are worth reading even if slick comedy thrillers aren't to your taste.
comedy-tragedy n. a play or (in later use) other literary or dramatic work which combines elements of comedy and tragedy; a tragicomedy.
ΚΠ
1655 Duchess of Newcastle Worlds Olio 10 Satyr is more proper for a Comedy Tragedy then for pure Comedy.
1894 News & Observer (Raleigh, N. Carolina) 9 Mar. As a subject for recital he took the comedy-tragedy Henry IV.
1910 Daily Chron. 20 Jan. 6/6 Dickens makes the election a farce, Meredith treats it in a spirit of comedy-tragedy, Samuel Warren describes the contest with laboured realism.
1991 Theatre Jrnl. 43 260/1 A comedy-tragedy portraying the comical aspects of the awkward rituals and formalities which follow the death of a beloved.
comedy writer n. a writer, esp. a playwright, who composes a comedy or comedies; (now also) someone who writes comedy scripts for theatre, radio, television, or cinema.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > playwriting > [noun] > playwright > of specific types of play
comicar1523
comedy writer1549
comic1549
comediant1568
comediographer1576
comedian1580
comic poet1589
mimograph1623
mimographer1638
mimic1654
mono-dramatist1803
melodramatist1812
farcer1813
comedist1819
farceur1889
thesis-playwright1902
thick ear1909
music-dramatist1947
compressionist1961
psychodramatist1973
1549 T. Cooper Lanquet's Epitome of Crons. ii. f. 51 Cratinus, and Plato, comedie writers, and Aristarchus maker of tragedies, liued.
1587 Sir P. Sidney & A. Golding tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. ix. 132 Sophocles, Aeschylus, and the very Comedywriters [Fr. les Comiques] speake after the same maner.
1784 W. Fitzherbert Maxims & Refl. 94 Romance and comedy writers always make lovers rich before they marry.
1828 W. Taylor Historic Surv. German Poetry I. 340 A comedy-writer is one who turns vices into ridicule.
1946 Washington Post 10 Feb. s6/1 Except for comedy writers, the murder men are the highest paid writers in the radio script field.
1994 Wall St. Jrnl. 28 Nov. a1 He's a fed-up Hollywood comedy writer..who went west..to seek his fortune in sitcoms.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

comedyn.2

Forms: late Middle English comedies (plural).
Origin: Probably a borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin comedia.
Etymology: Probably < post-classical Latin comedia kind of gruel or some kind of accompaniment to bread (1352 in a glossary; compare comedium meal, feast (1279 in a British source)), probably < classical Latin comedere to consume (see comestible adj.) + -ia -y suffix3. Perhaps compare earlier comade n.
Obsolete.
Apparently: a type of gruel or caudle.
ΚΠ
a1475 J. Russell Bk. Nurture (Harl. 4011) in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 150 Comedies, Cawdelles cast in Cawdrons, ponnes, or pottes.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online September 2021).
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