humorist

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See also: Humorist

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From humor +‎ -ist.

Noun

humorist (plural humorists)

  1. (medicine, now rare, historical) Someone who believes that health and temperament are determined by bodily humours; a humoralist.
  2. (obsolete) Someone subject to whims or fancies; an eccentric.
    • 1751, [Tobias] Smollett, The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle , volume (please specify |volume=I to IV), London: Harrison and Co., , →OCLC:
      She and the duke used to rally me upon my fondness for lord W—m, who was a sort of an humourist, and apt to be in a pet, in which case he would leave the company, and go to bed by seven o'clock in the evening.
    • 1792, James Boswell, in Danziger & Brady (eds.), Boswell: The Great Biographer (Journals 1789–1795), Yale 1989, p. 175:
      I called on him and found him a contemporary of Beauclerk and Langton at Trinity College, Oxford, and a man of reading and animation, but a kind of humourist.
  3. A humorous or witty person, especially someone skilled in humorous writing or performance.
    • 1921, Ben Travers, chapter 1, in A Cuckoo in the Nest, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company, published 1925, →OCLC:
      Peter, after the manner of man at the breakfast table, had allowed half his kedgeree to get cold and was sniggering over a letter. Sophia looked at him sharply. The only letter she had received was from her mother. Sophia's mother was not a humourist.
    • 2007 January 18, Richard Severo, “Art Buchwald, 81, Columnist and Humorist Who Delighted in the Absurd”, in The New York Times:
      Art Buchwald, who satirized the follies of the rich, the famous and the powerful for half a century as the most widely read newspaper humorist of his time, died Wednesday night in Washington.
    • 2010 December 24, Neil Genzlinger, “What’s So Funny?”, in The New York Times:
      But when it comes to conveying what made these people funny, what impact they had in their day and, especially, what debt they are owed by present-day humorists, Johnson doesn’t put much meat on the old bones.
  4. One who studies or portrays the humours of people.

Coordinate terms

Translations

Romanian

Noun

humorist m (plural humoriști, feminine equivalent humoristă)

  1. Alternative spelling of umorist.