half-serious









half-serious


adjective

  1. of, showing, or characterized by deep thought.
  2. of grave or somber disposition, character, or manner: a serious occasion; a serious man.
  3. being in earnest; sincere; not trifling: His interest was serious.
  4. requiring thought, concentration, or application: serious reading; a serious task.
  5. weighty or important: a serious book; Marriage is a serious matter.
  6. giving cause for apprehension; critical: The plan has one serious flaw.
  7. Medicine/Medical. (of a patient’s condition) having unstable or otherwise abnormal vital signs and other unfavorable indicators, as loss of appetite and poor mobility: patient is acutely ill.

noun

  1. that which is of importance, grave, critical, or somber: You have to learn to separate the serious from the frivolous.

adjective

  1. not entirely serious

adjective

  1. grave in nature or disposition; thoughtfula serious person
  2. marked by deep feeling; in earnest; sincereis he serious or joking?
  3. concerned with important mattersa serious conversation
  4. requiring effort or concentrationa serious book
  5. giving rise to fear or anxiety; criticala serious illness
  6. informal worthy of regard because of substantial quantity or qualityserious money; serious wine
  7. informal extreme or remarkablea serious haircut
adj.

mid-15c., “expressing earnest purpose or thought” (of persons), from Middle French sérieux “grave, earnest” (14c.), from Late Latin seriosus, from Latin serius “weighty, important, grave,” probably from a PIE root *swer- (4) “heavy” (cf. Lithuanian sveriu “to weigh, lift,” svarus “heavy;” Old English swære “heavy,” German schwer “heavy,” Gothic swers “honored, esteemed,” literally “weighty”). As opposite of jesting, from 1712; as opposite of light (of music, theater, etc.), from 1762. Meaning “attended with danger” is from 1800.

adj.

  1. Being of such import as to cause anxiety, as of a physical condition.
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