Citations:sitcomedian

Noun: "an actor who appears on a sitcom"

 * 1985 — Lloyd Grove, "Coleman's Cold 'Fire'", The Washington Post, 13 April 1985:
 * Gary Coleman is no longer cute. In "Playing With Fire," a two-hour NBC movie billed as the sitcomedian's "dramatic debut," airing Sunday night at 8 on Channel 4, he is truly mean.
 * 1993 — Kim Masters, "Four Pals in Their Prime Time", The Washington Post, 4 January 1993:
 * Some are chary of the Thomasons, finding something a little uncomfortable about this exceptionally intimate linkage between the president and the sitcomedians.
 * 1997 — Howard V. Hendrix, Lightpaths, Borgo Press (2011), ISBN 9781434411983, pages 39-40:
 * Dimly she realized the house must have been programmed to greet arrivals in this fashion — specifically herself, in this case, for the program that appeared in the bedroom as she walked in was in English.
 * "What?" said a whey-faced young sitcomedian with an exaggerated shrug and knowing smile.
 * 2003 — Tim Cuprisin, "Bits of ethnic radio are still available", Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, 21 April 2003:
 * If you love Ray Romano -- and we know that "Everybody Loves Raymond" -- check out the latest Esquire, which profiles the successful sitcomedian.