You could use guffaw. A more precise, albeit lesser-known word is cachinnate. In fact, my spell-check doesn't even recognize it, although you can check an online dictionary to verify it is, in fact, a word.
guffaw,chortle, or cackle
A vivid verb is a verb which creates a distinctive mental picture for the reader. A vivid verb for swimming is splashing around.
what is the vivid verb of looks , closes, moves, says, goes.
Laugh is a noun (a laugh) and a verb (to laugh).
LOL (Laughing Out Loud)
guffaw,chortle, or cackle
guffaw,chortle, or cackle
The verb form for the noun laughter is 'laugh' (laughs, laughing, laughed).
It's a loud laugh.
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
A vivid verb is a verb which creates a distinctive mental picture for the reader. A vivid verb for swimming is splashing around.
No. Laugh is a verb, loud is an adverb (loudly), and out is an adverb (modifies loud, idiomatically). The idiom "out loud" means "aloud." Loud, is, however, usually an adjective (loud noise, loud colors).
NO!!!! An adverb qualifies a verb. e.g. The dog barked loudly. Verb ; barked Adverb ; loudly.
what is the vivid verb of looks , closes, moves, says, goes.
Magnificent is not a verb, it is an adjective, but it would qualify as "vivid", yes.
Laugh is a noun (a laugh) and a verb (to laugh).
LOL (Laughing Out Loud)