comedy
comedy
(kŏmʹĭ-dē) noun
Abbr. com.
1.
a. A dramatic work that is light and often humorous or satirical in tone and that usually contains a happy resolution of the thematic conflict. b. The genre made up of such works.
2. A literary or cinematic work of a comic nature or that uses the themes or methods of comedy.
3. Popular entertainment composed of jokes, satire, or humorous performance.
4. The art of composing or performing comedy.
5. A humorous element of life or literature: the human comedy of political campaigns.
6. A humorous occurrence.
noun
, attributive.
Often used to modify another noun: a comedy writer; a comedy show.
idiom.
comedy of errors
A ludicrous event or sequence of events: The candidate's campaign turned out to be a political comedy of errors.
[Middle English comedie, from Medieval Latin cōmēdia, from Latin cōmoedia, from Greek kōmōidia, from kōmōidos, comic actor : kōmos, revel + aoidos, singer (from aeidein, to sing).]