Breadcrumbs:

From http://www.bartleby.com

Fun
NOUN:1. A source of enjoyment, amusement, or pleasure. 2. Enjoyment; amusement: have fun at the beach. 3. Playful, often noisy, activity.
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: funned, fun·ning, funs
Informal To behave playfully; joke.
ADJECTIVE: Informal Enjoyable; amusing: “You're a real fun guy” (Margaret Truman).
IDIOM: for (or in) fun As a joke; playfully.
ETYMOLOGY: Possibly from fon, to make a fool of, from Middle English fonnen, to fool, possibly from fonne, fool.
USAGE NOTE: The use of fun as an attributive adjective, as in a fun time, a fun place, probably originated in a playful reanalysis of the use of the word in sentences such as It is fun to ski, where fun has the syntactic function of adjectives such as amusing or enjoyable. The usage became popular in the 1950s and 1960s, though there is some evidence to suggest that it has 19th-century antecedents, but it can still raise eyebrows among traditionalists. The day may come when this usage is entirely unremarkable, but writers may want to avoid it in more formal contexts.


Page last modified on February 01, 2007, at 07:03 PM CST
Unless otherwise noted all content is © Bill Reveile 1993-2007