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laughing

[ UK /lˈɑːfɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈɫæfɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. showing or feeling mirth or pleasure or happiness
    laughing children

How To Use laughing In A Sentence

  • We had been talking and laughing a great deal for more than half an hour when suddenly the lady burst into tears.
  • As soon as everyone stopped laughing, they noticed a few baby cradles at the other side of the room.
  • But others of the Muscovite band were fond of congregating at this spot and hour for their lustral summer rites -- white-skinned lads and lasses, matrons and reverent elders, all in a state of Adamitic nudity, splashing about the water of this sunny cover, devouring raw fish and crabs after the manner of the fabled Ichthyophagi, laughing, kissing, saying nice things about God, and combing out each other's long tow-coloured hair. South Wind
  • I mustered the entire caravan outside the tembe, our flags and streamers were unfurled, the men had their loads resting on the walls, there was considerable shouting, and laughing, and negroidal fanfaronnade. How I Found Livingstone
  • It has been reduced to something of a laughing stock. Times, Sunday Times
  • Here we may be sneering at the devaluation of the single currency, but in Germany they're laughing all the way to the export markets.
  • Springtime for Henry played Broadway in the early '30s and then again in the early '50s but became a laughingstock as Edward Everett Horton repeatedly barnstormed it.
  • She and I were laughing and joking as the car whipped round curves at 70 mph.
  • Mr. Derringham says you are called Cheiron," Mr.. Cricklander announced laughingly. Halcyone
  • Somewhere in the darkest, dingiest corner of hell, Andrew Wilson is laughing," Beuke told jurors. Jon Burge Trial: Jury Begins Deliberations
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