underlaugh

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Probably derived from Middle English underlaughen (to smile; smile with the eyes), Middle English underlaughteren (to smirk), equivalent to under- +‎ laugh.

Noun[edit]

underlaugh (plural underlaughs)

  1. A suppressed laugh
    • 1964, Galaxy Magazine - Volume 23, Issues 1-6, page 52:
      John Joy Tree greeted this with an ugly underlaugh, a barely audible sound which made Casher feel the whole situation was ridiculous.
    • 2011, Ward McBurney, Sap's War:
      “A stretcher case, surely,” he added, and an underlaugh rippled through the ranks and files.
    • 2012, Dana Spiotta, Stone Arabia, page 11:
      So in this specific role, in this specific scene, my fontal rush of propulsive fear, my prickly self-strickenness, and my strangled underlaugh that was (and still is) a result of what Sigmund Freud identified as the “liminal dilemma between the intense desire for supplication and the concurrent need for masochistic provocation” all combined to create an illusion of a brilliant stage presence, bursting with potential and future possibility.
    • 2013, Charles Kingsley, Delphi Complete Works of Charles Kingsley:
      Campbell laughed a quiet under-laugh, half sad, half humorous.

Related terms[edit]

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