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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CLI-COM |
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COMEDY , the general term applied to a type of drama the chief
burlesque , &c. As compared with tragedy it is distinguished by having a happy ending (this being considered for a long time the essential difference), by quaint situations, and by lightness of dialogue and character-drawing. As compared with farce it abstains from crude and boisterous jesting, and is marked by some subtlety of dialogue and plot. It is, however, difficult to draw a hard and fast line of demarcation, there being a distinct tendency to combine the characteristics of farce with those of true comedy. This is perhaps more especially the case in the so-called " musical comedy," which became popular in Great
The word " comedy " is derived from the Gr. Kwc La, which is a compound either of KW/.WS (revel) and aoo5OS (singer; ?taLlsw, gSecv, to sing), or of KWa7 ( village
village
The adjective " comic " (Gr. KwuKOS), which strictly means that which relates to comedy, is in modern usage generally confined to the sense of "laughter-provoking": it is distinguished from " humorous " or " witty " inasmuch as it is applied to an incident or remark which provokes spontaneous laughter without a special
glory
Spencer
See DRAMA; also HUMOUR; CARICATURE; PLAY, &C. End of Article: COMEDY If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/CLI_COM/COMEDY.html"> COMEDY </a> |
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