Comedial


[kom-i-dee] /ˈkɒm ɪ di/

noun, plural comedies.
1.
a play, movie, etc., of light and humorous character with a happy or cheerful ending; a dramatic work in which the central motif is the triumph over adverse circumstance, resulting in a successful or happy conclusion.
2.
that branch of the drama which concerns itself with this form of composition.
3.
the element of drama, of literature generally, or of life.
4.
any literary composition dealing with a theme suitable for comedy, or employing the methods of comedy.
5.
any or humorous incident or series of incidents.
/ˈkɒmɪdɪ/
noun (pl) -dies
1.
a dramatic or other work of light and amusing character
2.
the genre of drama represented by works of this type
3.
(in classical literature) a play in which the main characters and motive triumph over adversity
4.
the humorous aspect of life or of events
5.
an amusing event or sequence of events
6.
humour or comic style: the comedy of Chaplin
n.

late 14c., from Old French comedie (14c., “a poem,” not in the theatrical sense), from Latin comoedia, from Greek komoidia “a comedy, amusing spectacle,” probably from komodios “actor or singer in the revels,” from komos “revel, carousal, merry-making, festival,” + aoidos “singer, poet,” from aeidein “to sing,” related to oide (see ode).

The passage on the nature of comedy in the Poetic of Aristotle is unfortunately lost, but if we can trust stray hints on the subject, his definition of comedy (which applied mainly to Menander) ran parallel to that of tragedy, and described the art as a purification of certain affections of our nature, not by terror and pity, but by laughter and ridicule. [Rev. J.P. Mahaffy, “A History of Classical Greek Literature,” London, 1895]

The classical sense of the word, then, was “amusing play or performance,” which is similar to the modern one, but in the Middle Ages the word came to mean poems and stories generally (albeit ones with happy endings), and the earliest English sense is “narrative poem” (e.g. Dante’s “Commedia”). Generalized sense of “quality of being amusing” dates from 1877.

Comedy aims at entertaining by the fidelity with which it presents life as we know it, farce at raising laughter by the outrageous absurdity of the situation or characters exhibited, & burlesque at tickling the fancy of the audience by caricaturing plays or actors with whose style it is familiar. [Fowler]

A work — play, story, novel, or film — that ends happily for the main character (or protagonist) and contains humor to some degree. A comedy may involve unhappy outcomes for some of the characters. Shylock, for example, in The Merchant of Venice, a comedy by William Shakespeare, is disgraced in the play. The ancient Greeks and Romans produced comedies, and great numbers have been written in modern times.

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    [kuh-mee-dik, -med-ik] /kəˈmi dɪk, -ˈmɛd ɪk/ adjective 1. of, relating to, or of the nature of comedy. /kəˈmiːdɪk/ adjective 1. of or relating to comedy adj. 1630s, from Latin comoedicus, from Greek komoidikos “pertaining to comedy,” from komoidia (see comedy).

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    [kuh-mee-dik, -med-ik] /kəˈmi dɪk, -ˈmɛd ɪk/ adjective 1. of, relating to, or of the nature of comedy. /kəˈmiːdɪk/ adjective 1. of or relating to comedy adj. 1630s, from Latin comoedicus, from Greek komoidikos “pertaining to comedy,” from komoidia (see comedy).

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