different between laughing vs conniption

laughing

English

Etymology

From Middle English lawghynge; equivalent to laugh +? -ing.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?l??f??/
  • Rhymes: -??f??

Noun

laughing (countable and uncountable, plural laughings)

  1. The action of the verb to laugh.

Verb

laughing

  1. present participle of laugh

Usage notes

As with other present participles, laughing can be used as an adjective:

The Laughing Cavalier
laughing hyena

Likewise, as with other gerunds, laughing can be used as a verbal noun:

Laughing could be heard all the way from the back of the room!

Synonyms

  • (as a gerund): hilarity, laughter

Derived terms

laughing From the web:

  • what laughing gas
  • what laughing does to your body
  • what laughing does to your brain
  • what laughing gas feels like
  • what laughing gif
  • what laughing means
  • what laughing buddha indicates
  • what laughing does to you


conniption

English

Etymology

Since 1833, from American English. Unknown origin, perhaps related to corruption or captious.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /k??n?p.??n/

Noun

conniption (plural conniptions)

  1. (informal) A fit of anger or panic; conniption fit.
    • 2001, Slipknot, "My Plague", Iowa.
    When she came downstairs and saw what her children were eating, she had a conniption.
    ...threatened by the conniptions gripping Wall Street (Businessweek Oct.20, 2008)
  2. A fit of laughing; convulsion.
    The joke was not that funny, but he went into conniptions laughing.

Synonyms

  • (fit of anger or panic): see Thesaurus:tantrum

Translations

conniption From the web:

  • conniption meaning
  • what conniption fit meaning
  • conniption what does it mean
  • conniption what is the definition
  • what's a conniption fit
  • what does conniption mean in english
  • what does conniption
  • what do connotation mean
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like