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"funny weekend" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used when referring to something amusing happening during the weekend, or to talk about a weekend spent doing something humorous or entertaining. For example: "We had a really funny weekend, between playing board games and telling funny stories."
Exact(1)
"It was a funny weekend," said Giovanardi. "I can say it's funny now, because I won the championship, but missing the second race — it has never happened with this car and it was a surprise.
Similar(56)
Somehow, that sounds less funny than Weekend at Bernie's 2, if that's even possible.
After her success on, where she played a plethora of funny characters and coanchored Weekend Update (first with Tina Fey followed by Seth Meyers), Poehler has worked on several projects.
Since Bob Shennan took over as boss, Radio 2 has been smoothed out, its evening fare becoming less of a jolt after the daytime, its weekend programmes funny but uncontroversial, its specialist shows weaved into the station's overall ethos and approach – as opposed to feeling as though they've been parachuted in by mistake.
On the season opener of NBC's "Saturday Night Live" this weekend, the funniest routine was also the riskiest.
I also wonder what regular viewers of Theroux now make of him; slowly but surely, it seems to me, he has gone from being the funny geek who spent weekends with hypnotists, porn stars and a lecherous Christine Hamilton, to a maker of sensitive and important investigations.
"Formed a Band," their breakthrough single, gleefully turns stardom inside out, and the rest of the album is either just as funny ("Moving to L.A.," "Good Weekend") or unexpectedly heartfelt ("Emily Kane").
We would gather on weekend nights, swapping funny and tragic stories of our dismal dating lives, reassuring one another of our collective beauty, intelligence and kindness, marveling at the idiocy of men who failed to see this in our friends.
But a funny thing happened during a weekend retreat to Lake George with the college's Franciscan faculty: he experienced a moment of grace, and a friar suggested he consider the priesthood.
In a rehearsal for the first New York City performance of "Wait, Wait... Don't Tell Me," Peter Sagal stood on the stage and refined his answer to the age-old question, "How do you get to Carnegie Hall?" Patience and practice are not sufficiently funny answers for this National Public Radio weekend comedy quiz show.
A funny thing happened at the weekend.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com