English
editEtymology
edit(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Prepositional phrase
edit- (idiomatic) Laughing vigorously; very amused; aching due to convulsive laughter.
- Synonym: in hysterics
- 1918, Laura Lee Hope, chapter 15, in The Outdoor Girls in Army Service:
- "I was just dancing with old Doctor Riley, and he kept me in stitches. Half the time he had almost to carry me around, I was laughing so."
- 1955 May 15, “People”, in Time:
- Leaving the White House after a unilateral chat with Coolidge, Actress Barrymore, in stitches from laughter, was confronted by perplexed newsmen wondering what was so funny.
- 2004, Willis Barnstone, We Jews and Blacks, →ISBN, page 59:
- I took a graduate seminar in close-reading of Dylan Thomas and Joyce, and among the smart students a nun and a rabbi kept us in stitches with their endless whimsy and scholarship.
Usage notes
edit- Often used with the verb keep.
Translations
editlaughing vigorously
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See also
edit- stitch (noun, sense 3)