| laughter | A movement (usually involuntary) of the muscles of the face, particularly of the lips, with a peculiar expression of the eyes, indicating merriment, satisfaction, or derision, and usually attended by a sonorous and interrupted expulsion of air from the lungs | en |
| laughter | A decidedly one-sided sports contest, especially where the winning team is able to score at will | en |
| laughter | The sound produced by air so expelled | en |
| laughter | laughing isim | en |
| laughter | the activity of laughing; the manifestation of joy or mirth of scorn; "he enjoyed the laughter of the crowd | en |
| laughter | See Laugh, v | en |
| laughter | Laughter is the sound of people laughing, for example because they are amused or happy. Their laughter filled the corridor He delivered the line perfectly, and everybody roared with laughter. hysterical laughter | en |
| laughter | Laughter is the fact of laughing, or the feeling of fun and amusement that you have when you are laughing. Pantomime is about bringing laughter to thousands. when people laugh, or the sound of people laughing | en |
| laughter | the sound of laughing | en |
| laughter | the activity of laughing; the manifestation of joy or mirth of scorn; "he enjoyed the laughter of the crowd" | en |
| laughter | act of laughing; sound which expresses amusement (or scorn, etc.); cheerfulness, mirthfulness isim | en |