drollery – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
drollery
n.
comical behaviour; humorous joke or story; something funny; amusing quality
Drolleries
Drolleries (or
drollery), often called a
grotesque, are decorative thumbnail images in the margins of
Illuminated manuscripts, most popular from about 1250 through the 15th century, though found earlier and later. The most common types of drollery images appear as mixed creatures, either between different animals, or between animals and human beings, or even between animals and plants or inorganic things. Examples include cocks with human heads, dogs carrying human masks, archers winding out of a fish’s mouth, bird-like dragons with an elephant’s head on the back. Often they have a thematic connection with the subject of the text of the page, and larger miniatures, and they usually form part of a wider scheme of decorated margins, though some are effectively
doodles added later.
drollery
Noun
1. a comic incident or series of incidents
(synonym) clowning, comedy, funniness
(hypernym) fun, play, sport
2. a quaint and amusing jest
(synonym) waggery
(hypernym) jest, joke, jocularity
Drollery
(n.)
The quality of being droll; sportive tricks; buffoonery; droll stories; comical gestures or manners.
(n.)
Something which serves to raise mirth
(n.)
A puppet show; also, a puppet.
(n.)
A lively or comic picture.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
drollery
n.
ٹھٹا, دل لگي, مذاق, ہنسي