English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From fun +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

funsome (comparative more funsome, superlative most funsome)

  1. Marked by fun; enjoyable; amusing; entertaining
    • 2003, Andre Stein, Peter Samu, Father's Milk:
      Nothing is a greater turn-on for Mom than seeing her funsome leading man enjoying her offspring.
    • 2014, Pepper Winters, Destroyed:
      He'd asked for more hookers, and I slapped him playfully. As much as I didn't want to admit—I liked Oscar. He'd called me a whore and grabbed my boob, but beneath the brash exterior lurked a fun-some surfer whose blue eyes caused one or two wings of attraction in my stomach.
    • 2015, Peter Gough, Sounds of the New Deal:
      The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported that humor was aplenty “in the unaffectedly joyous antics of [the] typical funsome Negro,” the production giving vent to “their natural flair for 'play actin' and their natural love of idolization.”