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5 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
hu·mor
/ˈhjumɚ/
幽默,詼諧,心情(
vt
.)迎合,牽就,順應
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
hu·mor
/ˈhjumɚ, ˈju-/
名詞
液,體液
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hu·mor
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Humored
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Humoring
.]
1.
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
.
It
is
my
part
to
invent
,
and
the
musician's
to
humor
that
invention
.
--
Dryden
.
2.
To
help
on
by
indulgence
or
compliant
treatment
;
to
soothe
;
to
gratify
;
to
please
.
You
humor
me
when
I
am
sick
.
--
Pope
.
Syn:
--
To
gratify
;
to
indulge
.
See
Gratify
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hu·mor
n.
[
Written
also
humour
.]
1.
Moisture
,
especially
,
the
moisture
or
fluid
of
animal
bodies
,
as
the
chyle
,
lymph
,
etc
.;
as
,
the
humors
of
the
eye
,
etc
.
Note:
☞
The
ancient
physicians
believed
that
there
were
four
humors
(
the
blood
,
phlegm
,
yellow
bile
or
choler
,
and
black
bile
or
melancholy
),
on
the
relative
proportion
of
which
the
temperament
and
health
depended
.
2.
Med.
A
vitiated
or
morbid
animal
fluid
,
such
as
often
causes
an
eruption
on
the
skin
.
“A
body
full
of
humors
.”
3.
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
.
Examine
how
your
humor
is
inclined
,
And
which
the
ruling
passion
of
your
mind
. --
Roscommon
.
A
prince
of
a
pleasant
humor
.
--
Bacon
.
I
like
not
the
humor
of
lying
.
--
Shak
.
4.
pl.
Changing
and
uncertain
states
of
mind
;
caprices
;
freaks
;
vagaries
;
whims
.
Is
my
friend
all
perfection
,
all
virtue
and
discretion
?
Has
he
not
humors
to
be
endured?
--
South
.
5.
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
.
For
thy
sake
I
admit
That
a
Scot
may
have
humor
,
I'd
almost
said
wit
. --
Goldsmith
.
A
great
deal
of
excellent
humor
was
expended
on
the
perplexities
of
mine
host
.
--
W
.
Irving
.
Aqueous humor
,
Crystalline humor
or
Crystalline lens
,
Vitreous humor
.
Anat.
See
Eye
.
Out of humor
,
dissatisfied
;
displeased
;
in
an
unpleasant
frame
of
mind
.
Syn:
--
Wit
;
satire
;
pleasantry
;
temper
;
disposition
;
mood
;
frame
;
whim
;
fancy
;
caprice
.
See
Wit
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
humor
n
1:
a
message
whose
ingenuity
or
verbal
skill
or
incongruity
has
the
power
to
evoke
laughter
[
syn
:
wit
,
humour
,
witticism
,
wittiness
]
2:
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
" [
syn
:
humour
,
sense of humor
,
sense of humour
]
3:
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
" [
syn
:
temper
,
mood
,
humour
]
4:
the
quality
of
being
funny
; "
I
fail
to
see
the
humor
in
it
"
[
syn
:
humour
]
5: (
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
" [
syn
:
humour
]
6:
the
liquid
parts
of
the
body
[
syn
:
liquid body substance
,
bodily fluid
,
body fluid
,
humour
]
v
:
put
into
a
good
mood
[
syn
:
humour
]
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