silly+laugh

  • 11laugh — laugh1 W2S2 [la:f US læf] v [: Old English; Origin: hliehhan] 1.) to make sounds with your voice, usually while you are smiling, because you think something is funny ▪ Maria looked at him and laughed. laugh at/about ▪ I didn t know what I was… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 12laugh — I UK [lɑːf] / US [læf] verb [intransitive] Word forms laugh : present tense I/you/we/they laugh he/she/it laughs present participle laughing past tense laughed past participle laughed *** Other ways of saying laugh: giggle to laugh in a nervous… …

    English dictionary

  • 13silly — sil|ly1 S3 [ˈsıli] adj comparative sillier superlative silliest [: Old English; Origin: sAlig happy ] 1.) not sensible, or showing bad judgment ▪ Stop asking silly questions. ▪ You made a lot of silly mistakes . ▪ I left my keys at home, which… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 14laugh — [[t]lɑ͟ːf, læ̱f[/t]] ♦ laughs, laughing, laughed 1) VERB When you laugh, you make a sound with your throat while smiling and show that you are happy or amused. People also sometimes laugh when they feel nervous or are being unfriendly. He was… …

    English dictionary

  • 15laugh*/*/*/ — [lɑːf] verb I 1) to make the noise with your voice that shows that you think that something is funny We talked and laughed late into the night.[/ex] The audience didn t laugh at his jokes.[/ex] They were still laughing about the experience years… …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 16silly — [[t]sɪ̱li[/t]] sillier, silliest 1) ADJ GRADED If you say that someone or something is silly, you mean that they are foolish, childish, or ridiculous. My best friend tells me that I am silly to be upset about this... You silly boy; why did you… …

    English dictionary

  • 17laugh yourself silly — ˌdrink, ˌlaugh, ˌshout, etc. yourself ˈsilly idiom (informal) to drink, laugh, shout, etc. so much that you cannot behave in a sensible way Main entry: ↑sillyidiom …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 18laugh at — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms laugh at : present tense I/you/we/they laugh at he/she/it laughs at present participle laughing at past tense laughed at past participle laughed at 1) a) laugh at someone/something to say unkind things about… …

    English dictionary

  • 19Silly People — Infobox Television episode Title = Silly People Series = Desperate Housewives Caption = Tom tries hard to impress Ed. Season = 2 Episode = 14 Airdate = February 12, 2006 Production = 214 Writer = Tom Spezialy Director = Robert Duncan McNeill… …

    Wikipedia

  • 20laugh out of court — verb To dismiss as silly something presented with genuine conviction or treated seriously. The claim that his dog wrote the poems was laughed out of court by publishers …

    Wiktionary