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comic

adjective

  1. quality of a character, situation or work
L14458 on Wikidata ↗

noun

  1. creative work in which pictures and text convey information such as narratives
  2. quality of a character, situation or work
L14459 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈkɒmɪk/ / /ˈkɑmɪk/

adj

Etymology: From Latin comicus, from Ancient Greek κωμικός (kōmikós, “relating to comedy”), from κῶμος (kômos, “carousal”).

  1. Pertaining to comedy, as a literary genre.

    comic genius

    a comic stereotype

  2. Using the techniques of comedy, as a composition, performer etc; amusing, entertaining.

    There is a quartet of comic musicians, who perform on instruments of an inconceivable bassness […]

  3. Unintentionally humorous; amusing, ridiculous.

    As there was something excessively comique in the distress of the landlord and his wife […], I could not forbear staying a little to be amused with it.

  4. Of or relating to comics or sequential art.

noun

Etymology: From Latin comicus, from Ancient Greek κωμικός (kōmikós, “relating to comedy”), from κῶμος (kômos, “carousal”).

  1. A comedian.

    She started out as a joke-writer on the radio, and first performed as a comic at the ages of 30.

  2. A story composed of drawn images arranged in a sequence, usually with textual captions; a comic book.
  3. A children's magazine.