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jokingly

/johk/US // dʒoʊk //UK // (dʒəʊk) //

会心地说着,会话中,会话,会心地说

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : something said or done to provoke laughter or cause amusement, as a witticism, a short and amusing anecdote, or a prankish act: He tells very funny jokes. She played a joke on him.
    • : something that is amusing or ridiculous, especially because of being ludicrously inadequate or a sham; a thing, situation, or person laughed at rather than taken seriously; farce: Their pretense of generosity is a joke. An officer with no ability to command is a joke.
    • : a matter that need not be taken very seriously; trifling matter: The loss was no joke.
    • : something that does not present the expected challenge; something very easy: The test was a joke for the whole class.
    • : practical joke.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    joked, jok·ing.

    • : to speak or act in a playful or merry way: He was always joking with us.
    • : to say something in fun or teasing rather than in earnest; be facetious: He didn't really mean it, he was only joking.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    joked, jok·ing.

    • : to subject to jokes; make fun of; tease.
    • : to obtain by joking: The comedian joked coins from the audience.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Sound of Colleagues was, like Pigeon’s Calm Office sound, supposed to be a joke at first.

  • Yes, he’s doing the same “unusual headline of the day” jokes as everybody else, but he’s also much more willing to get suddenly, viscerally angry, and when he does, the show crackles.

  • Basically, brands can seem like they are trying to get in on a joke they are unaware of — or they might be, or become, the joke.

  • Rhodes, who is 72, plans to retire at the end of August and jokes that “half the people here collect a Social Security check.”

  • Which is sort of a joke, but every middle road comes with compromises.

  • I jokingly asked him how he got the award: “Did you dress up like Lady Gaga in Damascus?”

  • When a new corporate office was built to house the management company, teachers jokingly began calling it the “White House.”

  • As al-Baghdadi was released, he jokingly told one of these commanders that he would see him in New York.

  • Instead, he semi-jokingly encouraged the “heavier” members of his contingency to perhaps make their way off stage.

  • He delivered those words jokingly and got big laughs—but as you can see for yourself, in print they are not all that funny.

  • A reprobate nowadays is a person who is looked upon as hopelessly bad, and the word is also sometimes used jokingly.

  • This should not be said jokingly, nor yet with that air by which some persons repel those whom they especially wish to attract.

  • The squire of Don Quixote, to whom a duke jokingly granted the government of an island for a few days.

  • The fateful day, as Bettys father jokingly called it, had arrived.

  • Again she spoke easily, jokingly; but there came over her a strange, involuntary feeling of repulsion for the odd-looking child.