With all the laughter in the classroom, the teacher couldn't help but laugh along.
The verb form for the noun laughter is 'laugh' (laughs, laughing, laughed).
You could use a number of words- 'guffaw', 'belly laugh', 'roar with laughter' and 'bellow with laughter' are just some.
you use you throat and stomach and your face describes the laughter as well
One example of using mirth in a sentence could be, "The birth of the twins were the cause of much mirth to the parents who had undergone numerous fertility treatments." Mirth means happiness and laughter.
Expressing one's feelings or thoughts unselfconsciously and without restraint: "fits of uninhibited laughter"
The students, now caught up in their own joke, were trying to contain their laughter, so they would not be given lines.
As the principal rose from the mud puddle, there was some muffled laughter from the students. The laughter from the baby was so contagious that soon everyone in the room was laughing as well.
Her response made me laugh out loud.
His deprecatingly humorous comments had us rolling in the aisles with laughter.
The correct interrogative pronoun is 'who' as the subject of the sentence. The interrogative pronoun 'whom' is the objective form. To use the objective form, the sentence should read:At whom did you laugh? (the pronoun 'whom' is the object of the preposition 'at')To use the pronoun 'who' as the subject:Who did you laugh at?
some times, yes. mainly people use different words to describe the sound of laughter.
The creepy stranger gave a humorless laugh.