zany
zany
englantihullunkurinen
Synonyymisanakirja
zany
humoristinen, huvittava, pellemäinen, klovnimainen, ilveilevä, sekopäinen, järjetön, typerä, älytön, naurettava, höpsähtänyt, hassu, hölmö, outo, höpsö, hullunkurinen, puhekielen ilmaus, arkikielen ilmaus.
Rimmaavat sanat
zany rimmaa näiden kanssa:
penny, nynny, känny, tyyny, lattiatyyny, niskatyyny, neulatyyny, ilmatyyny, haavatyyny, sohvatyyny...
Englannin sanakirja
zany (englanti > suomi)
zany englanniksi
unusual Unusual and bizarre in a funny, comical way; outlandish; clown clownish.
(quote-book)|year=1999|page=293|isbn=978-0-19-509132-8|passage=Press articles emphasized his &91;(w)'s&93; ambassadorial role and drew attention to the paradox that he was a shrewd musician and leader despite his zany image.
(quote-book)|year=2000|page=241|isbn=978-0-7864-0786-6|passage=When playing for (w), w:Rube Waddell|Rube Waddell's pattern after one of his zany outbursts usually involved promises of good behavior and a spurt of excellent pitching.
(quote-book)'s w:You Cant Take It with You (film)|You Can't Take it with You'' (1938)|editors=Andrew Horton and Joanna E. Rapf|title=A Companion to Film Comedy|location=Chichester, West Sussex|publisher=(w)|year=2013|page=280|isbn=978-1-4443-3859-1|passage=This runs counter to the play, where Grandpa is always benignly indulgent of all his zany progeny and their equally zany spouses, and is even somewhat zany himself.
(quote-book)|year=2015|page=117|isbn=978-1-55728-679-6|passage=The montage goes on to show scenes of Carla singing, dancing, meditating, breaking the tension amongst her co-cheftestants with sing-a-longs and “hootie-hoo” lessons, and ultimately wooing the judges with a combination of her zany personality and solid cooking skills.
ludicrous Ludicrously or incongruous incongruously comical.
puhekieltä A fool or clown, especially one whose business on the stage is to imitate foolishly the actions of the principal clown.
John Donne:
Alexander Pope:
1898, (w), (w) Chapter 4
(quote-book)|year=1996|page=69|isbn=978-0-85323-640-5|passage=Part of the illusory world is the 'quack' or mountebank who can be seen standing on his own special platform in the centre of the crowd(nb..). Such a person travelled round to fairs and markets selling his nostrums or medicines. This character is dressed in a lace hat, long periwig and embroidered coat with lace cuffs, and is attended by his zany, who is wearing a chequered harlequin outfit and is 'quacking' or 'puffing' his master's wares. No seventeenth- or eighteenth-century mountebank was complete without his zany or 'Merry Andrew' – a term originally applied to Dr Andrew Boorde, physician to Henry VIII and noted for his ready wit and humour, who was the subject of many broadside ballads.
puhekieltä To mimic foolishly.