Word of the
Day for Sunday 9th February 2014
Farceur \fahr-SUR\, noun:
1. a joker; wag.
2. a writer or director of or actor in farce.
2. a writer or director of or actor in farce.
A
man may be happy at repartee, a merrymaker, a farceur, a jester,
and yet not be a wit, although he may be esteemed one for his lively
conversation, drollery, aptitude in rejoinder and equivoque.
-- John Duke Coleridge (1820 – 1894), Great Thoughts from Master Minds Vol. V, 1908
-- John Duke Coleridge (1820 – 1894), Great Thoughts from Master Minds Vol. V, 1908
The
life of a professional farceur isn't all a farce, by a long
shot. This is especially true if you happen to be Collie of the Lambs Club.
-- William Collier, “When Life Is Not All a Farce,” New York Times, 1907
-- William Collier, “When Life Is Not All a Farce,” New York Times, 1907
Farceur comes from the French word of
the same spelling, which in turn is rooted in the Latin word farcire meaning
"to stuff, cram."
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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