出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/03 20:32 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 humour, from Old French humor, humour, from Latin hūmor, correctly ūmor (“liquid”), from hūmeō, correctly ūmeō (“to be moist”). The h in these words, which was silent in late Classical Latin, is folk etymological, due to the erroneous association with the word humus (“soil”).
The shift in meaning "liquid" > "mood" is attributed to the classical system of physiology, where human behaviour is regulated by four bodily humours (fluids). The sense "mood" gave rise to the verb sense "to give in to someone's mood or whim" and, by narrowing of meaning, the sense "wit".
humour (usually uncountable, plural humours) (British spelling)
humour (third-person singular simple present humours, present participle humouring, simple past and past participle humoured)
From Old French humor, from Latin hūmor, ūmor.