humorist

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1)  Someone who believes that health and temperament are determined by bodily humours; a humoralist.
 * 2)  Someone subject to whims or fancies; an eccentric.
 * 3) * 1792,, in Danziger & Brady (eds.), Boswell: The Great Biographer (Journals 1789–1795), Yale 1989, p. 175:
 * I called on him and found him a contemporary of Beauclerk and Langton at Trinity College, Oxford, and a man of reading and animation, but a kind of humourist.
 * 1) A humorous or witty person, especially someone skilled in humorous writing or performance.
 * 2) One who studies or portrays the humours of people.
 * 1) One who studies or portrays the humours of people.
 * 1) One who studies or portrays the humours of people.

Translations

 * Belarusian: гумары́ст, гумары́стка
 * Bulgarian: хумори́ст
 * Catalan: humorista
 * French:
 * Galician: humorista
 * German: ,
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian:
 * Latvian: humorists, humoriste
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian: ,
 * Russian: ,
 * Spanish: humorista
 * Ukrainian: гумори́ст, гумори́стка
 * Yiddish: הומאָריסט