Only 207 posts .... I would have thought finman on his own could have done better than that .... Perhaps he is leaving ... Oh well. ... Off to count my non existent varroa in my one hive then I'm not going to treat them and after that I will leave all 160kg of honey in the hive for the little darlings to eat .... I've managed to name all 53478 of them now ... And I know each one by name ....
Beatrice .... Oh and my queen is called Alice ...
Well... That should generate a few more from finny ....
Definition of humour in English
1. the quality of being amusing or comic, especially as expressed in literature or speech:his tales are full of humour
• the ability to express humour or amuse other people:their inimitable brand of humour
2. a mood or state of mind:her good humour vanishedthe clash hadn’t improved his humour
•[count noun] archaic an inclination or whim: and have you really burnt all your Plays to please a Humour?
3. (also cardinal humour) [count noun] historical each of the four chief fluids of the body (blood, phlegm, yellow bile (choler), and black bile (melancholy)) that were thought to determine a person’s physical and mental qualities by the relative proportions in which they were present.
Origin:
Middle English: via Old French from Latin humor 'moisture',
from humere (see humid). The original sense was 'bodily fluid' (surviving in aqueous humour and vitreous humour); it was used specifically for any of the cardinal humours (sense 3 of the noun), whence 'mental disposition' (thought to be caused by the relative proportions of the humours). This led, in the 16th century, to the senses 'mood' (sense 2 of the noun) and 'whim', hence to humour someone 'to indulge a person's whim'. sense 1 of the noun dates from the late 16th century