Amusement vs Buffoonery - What's the difference?
amusement | buffoonery | Related terms |
(uncountable) Entertainment
* 2005 , .
(countable) An activity that is entertaining or amusing, such as dancing, gunning, or fishing.
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foolishness, silliness; the behaviour expected of a buffoon.
* 1693 : William Congreve, The Old Bachelor
* 1814 : Jane Austen, Mansfield Park
* before 1891 : P.T. Barnum, quoted in The Life of Phineas T. Barnum [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1576]
Amusement is a related term of buffoonery.
As nouns the difference between amusement and buffoonery
is that amusement is amusement while buffoonery is foolishness, silliness; the behaviour expected of a buffoon.amusement
English
Noun
- This is some form of amusement you're talking about.
buffoonery
English
Noun
(buffooneries)- Araminta, come, I'll talk seriously to you now; could you but see with my eyes the buffoonery of one scene of address, a lover, set out with all his equipage and appurtenances; ...
- One could not expect anybody to take such a part. Nothing but buffoonery from beginning to end.
- The Temperance Reform was too serious a matter for trifling jokes and buffooneries .