Verb
Don't take him seriously. He's just joshing.
don't get all hot and bothered! I'm just joshing you Noun
a close-knit family constantly exchanging lighthearted joshes at the dinner table
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Verb
Cranston and Essiedu convey a father-son bond of unusual closeness — hugging, play-fighting, joshing; but this physical proximity will be repeated at the end of the play to devastatingly different effect.—Demetrios Matheou, HollywoodReporter, 22 Nov. 2025 Cheryl — who jumped in the mosh pit briefly at the first party — hung out in the back, sitting on her walker and gently joshing Erika’s young son for wearing earplugs while a singer screamed into the microphone.—Ariane Lange, Sacbee.com, 13 Nov. 2025 Anatole is a painter, an artform which photographer Lucien good-naturedly joshes him will soon be obsolete.—Jessica Kiang, Variety, 27 May 2025 See which companies are just joshing on social media — and which one has a real deal for you!—Brendan Le, People.com, 1 Apr. 2025 The family joshing and loving is great fun here; both Liss and Montana are terrific, live-wire young performers, thanks surely in part to Alex Mallory’s direction, and Rifai has given them a banquet of vibrant lines.—Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune, 12 Feb. 2025 Hudson’s accordion seems to come strolling in from a sidewalk serenade to meet Helm’s amused, exasperated vocal, joshing him along with countermelodies, trills and wheezily encouraging chords.—Jon Pareles, New York Times, 24 Jan. 2025 Elwood experiences some of the usual rigors of prison and reform school: the bullying, the joshing around, the discipline, the abuse.—K. Austin Collins, The Atlantic, 13 Dec. 2024 Bale, speaking in a bland, hollow voice that has the slightest hint of frat-boy joshing, delivers a piece of polished, satiric archness that goes well beyond the obvious allegorical gag (capitalism = murder) into ... what, exactly?—Tom Gliatto, Peoplemag, 9 Mar. 2024
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