Is there a word for laughing when faced with a hopeless situation? [duplicate]
This question already has an answer here:
What is this method of joking about a morbid situation called?
11 answers
A word for the unexpected reaction of laughing in a situation of complete hopelessness or laughing with sad undertones
single-word-requests
marked as duplicate by Matt E. Эллен♦ Jan 31 at 10:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
What is this method of joking about a morbid situation called?
11 answers
A word for the unexpected reaction of laughing in a situation of complete hopelessness or laughing with sad undertones
single-word-requests
marked as duplicate by Matt E. Эллен♦ Jan 31 at 10:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
2
You might need to be more specific - there's sardonic wit, nervous / embarrassed laughter, grim smile, etc. All of which could have different implications. I think it's also relevant what national culture you have in mind (based mainly on the movie Platoon, I believe many if not most people in the Far East grin / smile when they're terrified).
– FumbleFingers
Jan 29 at 17:14
Acceptance? Fatalism? Defiance? Please explain what sense you're looking for.
– Jason Bassford
Jan 29 at 19:43
"sardonic wit" sounds promising....
– rackandboneman
Jan 29 at 20:59
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
What is this method of joking about a morbid situation called?
11 answers
A word for the unexpected reaction of laughing in a situation of complete hopelessness or laughing with sad undertones
single-word-requests
This question already has an answer here:
What is this method of joking about a morbid situation called?
11 answers
A word for the unexpected reaction of laughing in a situation of complete hopelessness or laughing with sad undertones
This question already has an answer here:
What is this method of joking about a morbid situation called?
11 answers
single-word-requests
single-word-requests
asked Jan 29 at 17:06
BugCatcherJoeBugCatcherJoe
6316
6316
marked as duplicate by Matt E. Эллен♦ Jan 31 at 10:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Matt E. Эллен♦ Jan 31 at 10:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
2
You might need to be more specific - there's sardonic wit, nervous / embarrassed laughter, grim smile, etc. All of which could have different implications. I think it's also relevant what national culture you have in mind (based mainly on the movie Platoon, I believe many if not most people in the Far East grin / smile when they're terrified).
– FumbleFingers
Jan 29 at 17:14
Acceptance? Fatalism? Defiance? Please explain what sense you're looking for.
– Jason Bassford
Jan 29 at 19:43
"sardonic wit" sounds promising....
– rackandboneman
Jan 29 at 20:59
add a comment |
2
You might need to be more specific - there's sardonic wit, nervous / embarrassed laughter, grim smile, etc. All of which could have different implications. I think it's also relevant what national culture you have in mind (based mainly on the movie Platoon, I believe many if not most people in the Far East grin / smile when they're terrified).
– FumbleFingers
Jan 29 at 17:14
Acceptance? Fatalism? Defiance? Please explain what sense you're looking for.
– Jason Bassford
Jan 29 at 19:43
"sardonic wit" sounds promising....
– rackandboneman
Jan 29 at 20:59
2
2
You might need to be more specific - there's sardonic wit, nervous / embarrassed laughter, grim smile, etc. All of which could have different implications. I think it's also relevant what national culture you have in mind (based mainly on the movie Platoon, I believe many if not most people in the Far East grin / smile when they're terrified).
– FumbleFingers
Jan 29 at 17:14
You might need to be more specific - there's sardonic wit, nervous / embarrassed laughter, grim smile, etc. All of which could have different implications. I think it's also relevant what national culture you have in mind (based mainly on the movie Platoon, I believe many if not most people in the Far East grin / smile when they're terrified).
– FumbleFingers
Jan 29 at 17:14
Acceptance? Fatalism? Defiance? Please explain what sense you're looking for.
– Jason Bassford
Jan 29 at 19:43
Acceptance? Fatalism? Defiance? Please explain what sense you're looking for.
– Jason Bassford
Jan 29 at 19:43
"sardonic wit" sounds promising....
– rackandboneman
Jan 29 at 20:59
"sardonic wit" sounds promising....
– rackandboneman
Jan 29 at 20:59
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Gallows humor is "humor that treats serious, frightening, or painful subject matter in a light or satirical way." It has the connotation of someone laughing at their own execution.
Urban Dictionary actually has a good summary:
gallows humor
Sense of humor that arises from stressful, traumatic or
life-threatening situations where death seems to be an inevitability.
Different from black humor in that comments of this sort are made by
the person/persons affected (i.e. about to die).
It is not always used to mean that the person is facing literal death, but the idea is the same. They are expressing amusement or using humor in the face of their own inevitable fate.
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
add a comment |
I think that generally the kind of laughter you're talking about could be called nervous laughter or a nervous chuckle. It looks like "nervous laughter" is an actual term that psychiatrists use to describe the kind of laugh people give when they're put in a stressful situation. There is even an entire article on Wikipedia dedicated specifically to this expression:
Unhealthy or "nervous" laughter comes from the throat. This nervous laughter is not true laughter, but an expression of tension and anxiety. Instead of relaxing a person, nervous laughter tightens them up even further. Much of this nervous laughter is produced in times of high emotional stress, especially during times where an individual is afraid they might harm another person in various ways, such as a person's feelings or even physically.
add a comment |
According to Oxford Living Dictionary (https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/)
it's
MIRTHLESSNESS.
This noun is formed from an adjective 'mirthless':
(of a smile or laugh)
: lacking real amusement and typically expressing irony.
// ‘he gave a short, mirthless laugh.'
9
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
add a comment |
hysteria
Psychiatry - a psychological disorder (not now regarded as a single definite condition) whose symptoms include conversion of psychological stress into physical symptoms (somatization), selective amnesia, shallow volatile emotions, and overdramatic or attention-seeking behavior. The term has a controversial history as it was formerly regarded as a disease specific to women. – Google
1a : a psychoneurosis marked by emotional excitability and disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions without an organic basis. b : a similar condition in domestic animals. 2 : behavior exhibiting overwhelming or unmanageable fear or emotional excess. – MW
"hysterical laughter", in quotes, has almost half a million results.
3
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Gallows humor is "humor that treats serious, frightening, or painful subject matter in a light or satirical way." It has the connotation of someone laughing at their own execution.
Urban Dictionary actually has a good summary:
gallows humor
Sense of humor that arises from stressful, traumatic or
life-threatening situations where death seems to be an inevitability.
Different from black humor in that comments of this sort are made by
the person/persons affected (i.e. about to die).
It is not always used to mean that the person is facing literal death, but the idea is the same. They are expressing amusement or using humor in the face of their own inevitable fate.
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
add a comment |
Gallows humor is "humor that treats serious, frightening, or painful subject matter in a light or satirical way." It has the connotation of someone laughing at their own execution.
Urban Dictionary actually has a good summary:
gallows humor
Sense of humor that arises from stressful, traumatic or
life-threatening situations where death seems to be an inevitability.
Different from black humor in that comments of this sort are made by
the person/persons affected (i.e. about to die).
It is not always used to mean that the person is facing literal death, but the idea is the same. They are expressing amusement or using humor in the face of their own inevitable fate.
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
add a comment |
Gallows humor is "humor that treats serious, frightening, or painful subject matter in a light or satirical way." It has the connotation of someone laughing at their own execution.
Urban Dictionary actually has a good summary:
gallows humor
Sense of humor that arises from stressful, traumatic or
life-threatening situations where death seems to be an inevitability.
Different from black humor in that comments of this sort are made by
the person/persons affected (i.e. about to die).
It is not always used to mean that the person is facing literal death, but the idea is the same. They are expressing amusement or using humor in the face of their own inevitable fate.
Gallows humor is "humor that treats serious, frightening, or painful subject matter in a light or satirical way." It has the connotation of someone laughing at their own execution.
Urban Dictionary actually has a good summary:
gallows humor
Sense of humor that arises from stressful, traumatic or
life-threatening situations where death seems to be an inevitability.
Different from black humor in that comments of this sort are made by
the person/persons affected (i.e. about to die).
It is not always used to mean that the person is facing literal death, but the idea is the same. They are expressing amusement or using humor in the face of their own inevitable fate.
edited Jan 29 at 21:13
answered Jan 29 at 21:07
SolocutorSolocutor
9011313
9011313
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
add a comment |
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
Gallows humor is intentional and therefore the laughing is not an unexpected reaction.
– Old Pro
Jan 30 at 21:05
add a comment |
I think that generally the kind of laughter you're talking about could be called nervous laughter or a nervous chuckle. It looks like "nervous laughter" is an actual term that psychiatrists use to describe the kind of laugh people give when they're put in a stressful situation. There is even an entire article on Wikipedia dedicated specifically to this expression:
Unhealthy or "nervous" laughter comes from the throat. This nervous laughter is not true laughter, but an expression of tension and anxiety. Instead of relaxing a person, nervous laughter tightens them up even further. Much of this nervous laughter is produced in times of high emotional stress, especially during times where an individual is afraid they might harm another person in various ways, such as a person's feelings or even physically.
add a comment |
I think that generally the kind of laughter you're talking about could be called nervous laughter or a nervous chuckle. It looks like "nervous laughter" is an actual term that psychiatrists use to describe the kind of laugh people give when they're put in a stressful situation. There is even an entire article on Wikipedia dedicated specifically to this expression:
Unhealthy or "nervous" laughter comes from the throat. This nervous laughter is not true laughter, but an expression of tension and anxiety. Instead of relaxing a person, nervous laughter tightens them up even further. Much of this nervous laughter is produced in times of high emotional stress, especially during times where an individual is afraid they might harm another person in various ways, such as a person's feelings or even physically.
add a comment |
I think that generally the kind of laughter you're talking about could be called nervous laughter or a nervous chuckle. It looks like "nervous laughter" is an actual term that psychiatrists use to describe the kind of laugh people give when they're put in a stressful situation. There is even an entire article on Wikipedia dedicated specifically to this expression:
Unhealthy or "nervous" laughter comes from the throat. This nervous laughter is not true laughter, but an expression of tension and anxiety. Instead of relaxing a person, nervous laughter tightens them up even further. Much of this nervous laughter is produced in times of high emotional stress, especially during times where an individual is afraid they might harm another person in various ways, such as a person's feelings or even physically.
I think that generally the kind of laughter you're talking about could be called nervous laughter or a nervous chuckle. It looks like "nervous laughter" is an actual term that psychiatrists use to describe the kind of laugh people give when they're put in a stressful situation. There is even an entire article on Wikipedia dedicated specifically to this expression:
Unhealthy or "nervous" laughter comes from the throat. This nervous laughter is not true laughter, but an expression of tension and anxiety. Instead of relaxing a person, nervous laughter tightens them up even further. Much of this nervous laughter is produced in times of high emotional stress, especially during times where an individual is afraid they might harm another person in various ways, such as a person's feelings or even physically.
answered Jan 29 at 22:28
Mike RMike R
4,64521742
4,64521742
add a comment |
add a comment |
According to Oxford Living Dictionary (https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/)
it's
MIRTHLESSNESS.
This noun is formed from an adjective 'mirthless':
(of a smile or laugh)
: lacking real amusement and typically expressing irony.
// ‘he gave a short, mirthless laugh.'
9
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
add a comment |
According to Oxford Living Dictionary (https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/)
it's
MIRTHLESSNESS.
This noun is formed from an adjective 'mirthless':
(of a smile or laugh)
: lacking real amusement and typically expressing irony.
// ‘he gave a short, mirthless laugh.'
9
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
add a comment |
According to Oxford Living Dictionary (https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/)
it's
MIRTHLESSNESS.
This noun is formed from an adjective 'mirthless':
(of a smile or laugh)
: lacking real amusement and typically expressing irony.
// ‘he gave a short, mirthless laugh.'
According to Oxford Living Dictionary (https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/)
it's
MIRTHLESSNESS.
This noun is formed from an adjective 'mirthless':
(of a smile or laugh)
: lacking real amusement and typically expressing irony.
// ‘he gave a short, mirthless laugh.'
answered Jan 29 at 17:36
user307254user307254
1
1
9
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
add a comment |
9
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
9
9
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
"Mirthless laugh" seems appropriate but "mirthlessness" is far too general.
– David Richerby
Jan 29 at 23:29
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
youtu.be/_YAclFXGGpM?t=105
– TehShrike
Jan 30 at 18:00
add a comment |
hysteria
Psychiatry - a psychological disorder (not now regarded as a single definite condition) whose symptoms include conversion of psychological stress into physical symptoms (somatization), selective amnesia, shallow volatile emotions, and overdramatic or attention-seeking behavior. The term has a controversial history as it was formerly regarded as a disease specific to women. – Google
1a : a psychoneurosis marked by emotional excitability and disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions without an organic basis. b : a similar condition in domestic animals. 2 : behavior exhibiting overwhelming or unmanageable fear or emotional excess. – MW
"hysterical laughter", in quotes, has almost half a million results.
3
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
add a comment |
hysteria
Psychiatry - a psychological disorder (not now regarded as a single definite condition) whose symptoms include conversion of psychological stress into physical symptoms (somatization), selective amnesia, shallow volatile emotions, and overdramatic or attention-seeking behavior. The term has a controversial history as it was formerly regarded as a disease specific to women. – Google
1a : a psychoneurosis marked by emotional excitability and disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions without an organic basis. b : a similar condition in domestic animals. 2 : behavior exhibiting overwhelming or unmanageable fear or emotional excess. – MW
"hysterical laughter", in quotes, has almost half a million results.
3
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
add a comment |
hysteria
Psychiatry - a psychological disorder (not now regarded as a single definite condition) whose symptoms include conversion of psychological stress into physical symptoms (somatization), selective amnesia, shallow volatile emotions, and overdramatic or attention-seeking behavior. The term has a controversial history as it was formerly regarded as a disease specific to women. – Google
1a : a psychoneurosis marked by emotional excitability and disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions without an organic basis. b : a similar condition in domestic animals. 2 : behavior exhibiting overwhelming or unmanageable fear or emotional excess. – MW
"hysterical laughter", in quotes, has almost half a million results.
hysteria
Psychiatry - a psychological disorder (not now regarded as a single definite condition) whose symptoms include conversion of psychological stress into physical symptoms (somatization), selective amnesia, shallow volatile emotions, and overdramatic or attention-seeking behavior. The term has a controversial history as it was formerly regarded as a disease specific to women. – Google
1a : a psychoneurosis marked by emotional excitability and disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions without an organic basis. b : a similar condition in domestic animals. 2 : behavior exhibiting overwhelming or unmanageable fear or emotional excess. – MW
"hysterical laughter", in quotes, has almost half a million results.
answered Jan 30 at 2:03
MazuraMazura
8,17532149
8,17532149
3
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
add a comment |
3
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
3
3
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
Not to be confused with laughing maniacally, which is what the bad guy does in the movie. Laughing hysterically is what you do when you look at your phone bill.
– Mazura
Jan 30 at 2:09
add a comment |
2
You might need to be more specific - there's sardonic wit, nervous / embarrassed laughter, grim smile, etc. All of which could have different implications. I think it's also relevant what national culture you have in mind (based mainly on the movie Platoon, I believe many if not most people in the Far East grin / smile when they're terrified).
– FumbleFingers
Jan 29 at 17:14
Acceptance? Fatalism? Defiance? Please explain what sense you're looking for.
– Jason Bassford
Jan 29 at 19:43
"sardonic wit" sounds promising....
– rackandboneman
Jan 29 at 20:59