Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Ha-ha
Ha-ha′
(hä-hä′)
, Noun.
[See
Haw-haw
.] A sunk fence; a fence, wall, or ditch, not visible till one is close upon it.
[Written also
haw-haw
.] Definition 2024
ha-ha
ha-ha
English
Alternative forms
Interjection
- An approximation of the sound of laughter.
Translations
approximation of the sound of laughter
See also
- tee-hee
Noun
ha-ha (plural ha-has)
- A laugh.
- 1957, Ernie Kovacs, Zoomar, Doubleday (1957), page 28:
- Ha-has from both sides of the door.
- 1997, David Gessner, A Wild, Rank Place: One Year on Cape Cod, University Press of New England (1997), ISBN 0874518032, page 90:
- We had a fine dinner, punctuated with Heidi's loud ha-has and lots of wine.
- 2012, David Mazzarella, Always Eat the Hard Crust of the Bread: Recollections and Recipes from My Centenarian Mother, iUniverse (2012), ISBN 9781475913941, page 24:
- Not just giggles or a few ha-has, but the paralyzing kind of laughter, when the eyes tear and the nose runs and one gasps seemingly unto apoplexy.
- 1957, Ernie Kovacs, Zoomar, Doubleday (1957), page 28:
- Something funny; a joke.
- 1983, Texas Monthly, March 1983, page 68:
- You'll catch a few ha-has and even a golden memory or two singing along with the house piano player.
- 1996, Lois A. Chaber, "Sir Charles Grandison And The Human Prospect", in New Essays on Samuel Richardson (ed. Albert J. Rivero), St. Martin's Press (1996), ISBN 9780312125080, page 196:
- She is not rewarded until she learns to reduce her expectations, and surprises (the ha-has of this novel) are the educational tool.
- 2005, Sue Grafton, S Is for Silence, Berkley Books (2005), ISBN 1101146966, unnumbered page:
- If Kathy had been with us, she'd have countered with a few ha-has of her own, thus guaranteeing a laugh at his expense.
- 1983, Texas Monthly, March 1983, page 68:
Etymology 2
From French haha, supposedly from ha! as an expression of surprise.
Alternative forms
- har-har
Noun
ha-ha (plural ha-has)
- A ditch with one vertical side, acting as a sunken fence, designed to block the entry of animals into lawns and parks without breaking sightlines.
- 1814, Austen, Jane, Mansfield Park, volume one, chapter IX, Thomas Egerton:
- A few steps farther brought them out at the bottom of the very walk they had been talking of; and standing back, well shaded and sheltered, and looking over a ha-ha into the park, was a comfortable-sized bench, on which they all sat down.
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Translations
ditch acting as a sunken fence
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