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Answer for the clue "Friend's about to tolerate knockabout antics ", 9 letters:
slapstick

Alternative clues for the word slapstick

Word definitions for slapstick in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. characterized by horseplay and physical action; "slapstick style of humor" n. a boisterous comedy with chases and collisions and practical jokes acoustic device consisting of two paddles hinged together; used by an actor to make a loud noise without ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Slapstick ( Steve Harmon ) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics . He resembles an animated clown and has the abilities of a slapstick cartoon character, such as one from Looney Tunes , including warping reality ...

Usage examples of slapstick.

For all its black slapstick, however, the genre has a plangent undertow.

There followed a general donning of coats and scarves, some slapstick with dollar bills and the spilled ice from a drink, and then at some point Rosa and Joe seemed to remark that they were headed out the door of the chophouse and that Sammy was not with them.

Having already exhausted the possibilities inherent in deconstructing Vulcan speech patterns in order to extract a nonexistant humorous intent, you have now moved on to the much simpler examination of the form of humor known as slapstick.

Pornographic slapstick, custard pie, the comic relief with the landlady or bellhop before the real fucking resumes elsewhere.

Both desperately rubbed their foamy eyes like slapstick actors who had taken cream pies in the face.

Vonnegut: I said in Slapstick that she was the person I wrote for -- that every successful creative person creates with an audience of one in mind.

A comic skit, really, with quick changes, slapstick, clown faces, and japery, lasting twenty minutes when I was really rolling.

They thrived on an intellectual diet of scatology and slapstick and mimicry, picking names for each other gleaned without understanding from popular songs and furniture catalogues and discarded textbooks they could just about read.

Carefully awkward in his slapstick, but with overtones of Sahi and Cavett, Charlie George brought to television a sense of the absurd that was layered like veal parmesan, with peppercorns of logic and political truths to sting the unwary palate.