English-Thai Dictionary
farce
N ละคร ตลก การแสดง ตลก burlesque travesty la-kon-ta-lok
farcical
A เกี่ยวกับ ละคร ตลก ที่ เหลวไหล น่าหัวเราะ
farcy
N โรคช นิดหนึ่ง ของ ม้า เป็น ที่ ผิวหนัง และ หลอด น้ำเหลือง
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
FARCE
v.t.[L. farcio.] 1. To stuff; to fill with mingled ingredients. [Little used. ]
The first principles of religion should not be forced with school points and private tenets.
2. To extend; to swell out; as the farced title. [Little used. ]
FARCE
n.f'ars. [Literally, seasoning, stuffing or mixture, like the stuffing of a roasted fowl; force-meat.] A dramatic composition, originally exhibited by charlatans or buffoons, in the open street, for the amusement of the crowd, but now introduced upon the stage. It is written without regularity, and filled with ludicrous conceits. The dialogue is usually low, the persons of inferior rank, and the fable or action trivial or ridiculous.
Farce is that in poetry which grotesque is in a picture: the persons and actions of a farce are all unnatural, and the manners false.
FARCICAL
a. 1. Belonging to a farce; appropriated to farce.
They deny the characters to be farcical, because they are actually in nature.
2. Droll; ludicrous; ridiculous.
3. Illusory; deceptive.
FARCICALLY
adv. In a manner suited to farce; hence, ludicrously.
FARCILITE
n.[from farce. ] Pudding-stone. The calcarious farcilite, called amenla, is formed of rounded calcarious pebbles, agglutinated by a calcarious cement.
FARCIN, FARCY
n.A disease of horses, sometimes of oxen, of the nature of a scabies or mange.
FARCING
n.Stuffing composed of mixed ingredients.
FARCTATE
a.[L. farctus, stuffed, from farcio.] In botany, stuffed; crammed, or full; without vacuities; in opposition to tubular or hollow; as a farctate leaf, stem or pericarp.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
FARCE
Farce, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Farced, p. pr. & vb. n. Farcing (.] Etym: [F. Farcir, L. farcire; akin to Gr. Force to stuff, Diaphragm, Frequent, Farcy, Farse. ]
1. To stuff with forcemeat; hence, to fill with mingled ingredients; to fill full; to stuff. [Obs. ] The first principles of religion should not be farced with school points and private tenets. Bp. Sanderson.His tippet was aye farsed full of knives. Chaucer.
2. To render fat. [Obs. ] If thou wouldst farce thy lean ribs. B. Jonson.
3. To swell out; to render pompous. [Obs. ] Farcing his letter with fustian. Sandys.
FARCE
Farce, n. Etym: [F. farce, from L. farsus (also sometimes farctus ),p.p. pf farcire. See Farce, v. t.]
1. (Cookery )
Defn: Stuffing, or mixture of viands, like that used on dressing a fowl; forcemeat.
2. A low style of comedy; a dramatic composition marked by low humor, generally written with little regard to regularity or method, and abounding with ludicrous incidents and expressions. Farce is that in poetry which "grotesque " is in a picture: the persons and action of a farce are all unnatural, and the manners false. Dryden.
3. Ridiculous or empty show; as, a mere farce. "The farce of state. " Pope.
FARCEMENT
FARCEMENT Farce "ment, n.
Defn: Stuffing; forcemeat. [Obs. ] They spoil a good dish with. .. unsavory farcements. Feltham.
FARCICAL
FARCICAL Far "ci *cal, a.
Defn: Pertaining to farce; appropriated to farce; ludicrous; unnatural; unreal. They deny the characters to be farcical, because they are Gay. -- Far "ci *cal *ly, adv. -Far "ci *cal *ness, n.
FARCICAL
FARCICAL Far "ci *cal, a.
Defn: Of or pertaining to the disease called farcy. See Farcy, n.
FARCILITE
Far "ci *lite, n. Etym: [Farce +-lite. ] (Min. )
Defn: Pudding stone. [Obs. ] Kirwan.
FARCIMEN; FARCIN
FARCIMEN; FARCIN Far "ci *men, Far "cin, n. (Far. )
Defn: Same as Farcy.
FARCING
FARCING Far "cing, n. (Cookery )
Defn: Stuffing; forcemeat.
FARCTATE
Farc "tate, a. Etym: [L. farctus, p.p. of farcire. See Farce, v. t.](Bot. )
Defn: Stuffed; filled solid; as, a farctate leaf, stem, or pericarp; -- opposed to tubular or hollow. [Obs. ]
FARCY
Far "cy, n. Etym: [F. farcin; cf. L. farciminum a disease of horses,fr. farcire. See Farce. ] (Far. )
Defn: A contagious disease of horses, associated with painful ulcerating enlargements, esp. upon the head and limbs. It is of the same nature as glanders, and is often fatal. Called also farcin, and farcimen.
Note: Farcy, although more common in horses, is communicable to other animals and to human beings. Farcy bud, a hard, prominent swelling occurrinng upon the cutaneous surface in farcy, due to the obstruction and inflammation of the lymphatic vessels, and followed by ulceration. Youatt.
New American Oxford Dictionary
farce
farce |färs fɑrs | ▶noun a comic dramatic work using buffoonery and horseplay and typically including crude characterization and ludicrously improbable situations. • the genre of such works. • an absurd event: the debate turned into a drunken farce. ORIGIN early 16th cent.: from French, literally ‘stuffing, ’ from farcir ‘to stuff, ’ from Latin farcire. An earlier sense of ‘forcemeat stuffing ’ became used metaphorically for comic interludes “stuffed ” into the texts of religious plays, whence current usage.
farceur
far ceur |färˈsər fɑrˈsər | ▶noun a writer of or performer in farces. • a joker or comedian. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: French, from obsolete farcer ‘act in farces. ’
farcical
far ci cal |ˈfärsikəl ˈfɑrsəkəl | ▶adjective of or resembling a farce, esp. because of absurd or ridiculous aspects: a farcical tangle of events. DERIVATIVES far ci cal i ty |ˌfärsiˈkalitē |noun, far ci cal ly adverb
farcy
far cy |ˈfärsē ˈfɑrsi | ▶noun glanders in horses (or a similar disease in cattle ) in which there is inflammation of the lymph vessels, causing nodules (farcy buds or farcy buttons ). ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French farcin, from late Latin farciminum, from farcire ‘to stuff ’ (because of the appearance of the swollen nodules ).
Oxford Dictionary
farce
farce |fɑːs | ▶noun a comic dramatic work using buffoonery and horseplay and typically including crude characterization and ludicrously improbable situations. • [ mass noun ] the dramatic genre represented by farces. • an event or situation that is absurd or disorganized: the debate turned into a drunken farce. ORIGIN early 16th cent.: from French, literally ‘stuffing ’, from farcir ‘to stuff ’, from Latin farcire. An earlier sense of ‘forcemeat stuffing ’ became used metaphorically for comic interludes ‘stuffed ’ into the texts of religious plays, which led to the current usage.
farceur
farceur |fɑːˈsəː | ▶noun a writer of or performer in farces. • a comedian. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: French, from obsolete farcer ‘act farces ’.
farcical
far |ci ¦cal |ˈfɑːsɪk (ə )l | ▶adjective relating to or resembling farce, especially because of absurd or ridiculous aspects: he considered the whole idea farcical | a farcical situation. DERIVATIVES farcicality |-ˈkalɪti |noun, farcically adverb
farcy
farcy |ˈfɑːsi | ▶noun [ mass noun ] glanders in horses (or a similar disease in cattle ) in which there is inflammation of the lymph vessels, causing nodules (farcy buds or buttons ). ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French farcin, from late Latin farciminum, from farcire ‘to stuff ’ (because of the appearance of the swollen nodules ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
farce
farce noun 1 the stories approach farce: slapstick comedy, slapstick, burlesque, vaudeville, buffoonery. ANTONYMS tragedy. 2 the trial was a farce: mockery, travesty, absurdity, sham, pretense, masquerade, charade, joke, waste of time; informal shambles.
farcical
farcical adjective 1 the idea is farcical: ridiculous, preposterous, ludicrous, absurd, laughable, risible, nonsensical; senseless, pointless, useless; silly, foolish, idiotic, stupid, harebrained, cockamamie; informal crazy, daft. 2 farcical goings-on: madcap, zany, slapstick, comic, comical, clownish, amusing; hilarious, uproarious; informal wacky.
Oxford Thesaurus
farce
farce noun 1 at one or two points the stories approach bedroom farce: slapstick comedy, broad comedy, slapstick, burlesque, vaudeville, travesty, buffoonery; skit, squib; rare pasquinade. ANTONYMS tragedy. 2 he denounced the trial as a farce: absurdity, mockery, travesty, sham, pretence, masquerade, charade, piece of futility, joke, waste of time, laughing stock; apology, excuse, poor substitute; informal shambles.
farcical
farcical adjective 1 he considered the whole idea farcical: ridiculous, preposterous, ludicrous, absurd, laughable, risible, nonsensical; futile, senseless, pointless, useless, vain, in vain, to no avail, ineffectual; silly, foolish, idiotic, stupid, imbecilic, asinine, hare-brained; informal crazy, barmy, daft. 2 the farcical goings-on in a witty comedy of manners: madcap, zany, slapstick, comic, comical, clownish, light-hearted, humorous, amusing, chucklesome, droll, witty, entertaining; hilarious, uproarious, hysterical, hysterically funny; informal wacky, side-splitting, rib-tickling, killing, priceless.
Duden Dictionary
Farce
Far ce Substantiv, feminin , die |ˈfarsə österreichisch ˈfars |die Farce; Genitiv: der Farce, Plural: die Farcen französisch farce, eigentlich = Einlage, über das Vulgärlateinische zu lateinisch farcire = hineinstopfen 1 a Literaturwissenschaft volkstümliche, spottende Einlage im französischen Mirakelspiel b Literaturwissenschaft kürzeres, derbkomisches Lustspiel [in Versen ]; Posse 2 Angelegenheit, bei der die vorgegebene Absicht, das vorgegebene Ziel nicht mehr ernst zu nehmen ist (und nur noch lächerlich gemacht, verhöhnt wird ); lächerliche Karikatur 2 auf ein bestimmtes Ereignis die Vereidigung war eine einzige Farce 3 Kochkunst aus gehacktem Fleisch, Fisch, Gemüse, Ei, Gewürzen u. a. hergestellte Füllung bei Fleisch- und Fischspeisen
farcieren
far cie ren schwaches Verb Gastronomie |farc ie ren …ˈsiː …|mit einer Farce 3 füllen
French Dictionary
farce
farce n. f. nom féminin 1 Plaisanterie, blague. : Les amis ont fait une bonne farce à Maxime. SYNONYME facétie ; tour . 2 Hachis de viande, d ’herbes, etc. , dont on garnit l ’intérieur d ’une volaille, d ’un poisson, d ’un légume. : Une farce aux marrons pour la dinde. LOCUTION Être le dindon de la farce. Être la personne dont on se moque.
farceur
farceur , euse adj. et n. m. et f. adjectif et nom masculin et féminin Blagueur. : Sophie est une farceuse, elle aime plaisanter. Des gamins farceurs.
farci
farci , ie adj. adjectif 1 Rempli de farce. : Une dinde farcie. 2 figuré Plein de. : Une étude farcie d ’erreurs. SYNONYME bourré ; cousu ; rempli . Note Technique En ce sens, cet adjectif est toujours défavorable et son complément a aussi une valeur négative.
farcir
farcir v. tr. , pronom. verbe transitif 1 Remplir de farce. : Farcir un poulet. 2 figuré Remplir avec excès. : Farcir un exposé de formules chimiques. SYNONYME bourrer ; truffer . verbe pronominal familier Subir. : Ils devront se farcir tout le boulot. SYNONYME taper . Note Grammaticale À la forme pronominale, le participe passé de ce verbe s ’accorde en genre et en nombre avec le complément direct si celui-ci le précède. Les examens qu ’il s ’est farcis. Le participe passé reste invariable si le complément direct suit le verbe. Elle s ’est farci ces importuns pendant une heure. S ’il n ’y a pas de complément direct, le participe passé s ’accorde avec le sujet. La dinde s ’est farcie rapidement. finir
Sanseido Dictionary
FARC
FARC 〖スペイン Frerzas Armadas Revolucionarias Colombia 〗コロンビア革命軍 。コロンビアで最古最大の反政府武装組織 。
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
farce
farce /fɑː r s /名詞 1 C 笑劇, ファース, 道化芝居 ; U この種の演劇, 書物 ; (笑劇などの )おかしさ .2 C 〖単数形で 〗ばかげたこと, 茶番 ▸ The whole thing was a farce .すべてが茶番だった
farcical
far ci cal /fɑ́ː r sɪk (ə )l /形容詞 1 非常にばかげた, 茶番のような .2 笑劇の, 笑劇風の .~ly 副詞