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The phrase "wry laugh" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe a laugh that is dry, ironic, or slightly mocking, often in response to something that is amusing yet also somewhat serious or uncomfortable. Example: "She gave a wry laugh when she realized the irony of the situation."
Exact(33)
Buzinski gave a wry laugh.
He gave a wry laugh.
"We're very incestuous," says Mr. Dixon with a wry laugh.
His only defense against the calamity is a wry laugh.
"Sometimes," she said with a wry laugh, "I forget how to talk to adults".
"I guess that's why I don't have hits," Ms. Ndegeocello said, with a wry laugh, after wrapping up the tune.
Similar(24)
But wry laughs alone have not been enough to take Portsmouth to their second FA Cup final in three seasons.
"There are famous stories of me, even before I could walk, bouncing up and down to break things," he said with one of his frequent wry laughs.
"THERE'S a craze for land everywhere!" The line draws wry laughs from audiences in Dublin's Olympia Theatre at a revival of "The Field", John B. Keane's play about a land dispute in south-west Ireland.
Mr. Gardner's incapacitated Nick gets vast comic mileage out of an increasingly wry, cynical laugh in the face of a spouse, Ms. Briers's expertly deadpan Jan, whose sympathies were long ago spent.
I thought 'It's very important I get this book of short stories out immediately to dispel that notion!'" She gives a wry little laugh and then adds, with complete sincerity: "I have to make it new by actually being new".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com