No, the word "jocular" is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as funny, comic, or witty.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
Example: Martin is very entertaining when he tells jocular tales.
The jocular speech caused laughter in the audience.
the neighbors were jocular, they kept the neighbors laughing
"April Fools' Day always puts me in a jocular mood."
Jocular is something funny or witty, a joke or anything thought to be humorous.
He's so jocular that you can't get any serious sentence from him.
When your boss is angrily questioning you, a jocular response would be a bad idea. The publishers did not appreciate the humor in the author's jocular comments about their other writers.
Jocular.
Jocular?
Jocular Winds - 1913 was released on: USA: 6 March 1913 UK: 3 May 1913
jovial, jealous, jocular
Jocular means to characterize jokingly, so "direct characterization" may be an accurate antonym (Direct characterization means to describe a person or thing by simply telling you what he/she/it is like).
The cast of Jocular Winds - 1913 includes: Phyllis Gordon as The Stranger Louise Lester as Mrs. Carlton George Periolat as John Morton