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The phrase "a very funny time" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe an experience or event that was amusing or entertaining.
Example: "We had a very funny time at the comedy show last night; I couldn't stop laughing."
Alternatives: "a hilarious time" or "an amusing time".
Similar(60)
There was a very funny [time] I remember an afternoon a few years ago, I guess my daughter must have been about, maybe about ten or so, and we're sitting at home and we had on the film by Val Lewton called The Seventh Victim, a wonderful film from 1945, which I like very, very much.
The shifts were very funny times.
Chris goes on to tell a very funny anecdote from "his time as a real journalist" about an encounter with Christopher Reeve, but I'm not sure I've the gall to print it.
MacFarlane is a very funny dude, and there are times..
The Times carried a very funny account of a very middle-class and middle-aged Momentum meeting in a comfortable London suburb where wine and cheese was proposed for future sessions.
Costolo, who is a very funny guy, was obviously kidding at the time.
Reich says he has respect for the musicianship of the serialist tradition, but little affection for the music, though he did have time for Berio - "a very funny and nice guy" - and was inspired by Berio's work on a piece involving reading extracts from Finnegans Wake.
A very funny piece.
It is also a very funny book.
A very funny play.
It was a very funny-looking spot.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com