have fun (third-person singular simple present has fun, present participle having fun, simple past and past participle had fun)
- To enjoy oneself; to experience enjoyable activities.
Blondes have more fun.
Person 1: I'm going to the bathroom.
Person 2: Don't have too much fun.
1979, Robert Hazard (lyrics and music), “Girls Just Want to Have Fun”, in She's So Unusual[1], performed by Cyndi Lauper, published 1983:I come home, in the mornin' light / My mother says "when you gonna live your life right" / Oh momma, dear, we're not the fortunate ones / And girls, they wanna have fun / Oh, girls just wanna have fun
enjoy oneself
- Arabic: مَرِحَ (mariḥa)
- Azerbaijani: əylənmək
- Catalan: divertir-se (ca), entretenir-se (ca)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 玩得開心/玩得开心 (wán de kāixīn)
- Czech: bavit se (cs)
- Dutch: lol maken
- Esperanto: amuziĝi
- Finnish: pitää hauskaa (fi), huvitella (fi), rillutella (colloquial)
- French: s’amuser (fr), s’égayer (fr)
- Galician: divírtete
- German: Spaß haben
- Greek: διασκεδάζω (el) (diaskedázo)
- Hebrew: נֶהֱנָה (he) (nehená), כִּיֵּף (he) (kiyyéf) (informal)
- Hindi: मस्ती करना (mastī karnā)
- Hungarian: szórakozik (hu), jól szórakozik, jól érzi magát
- Italian: divertirsi (it)
- Japanese: 楽しむ (ja) (たのしむ, tanoshimu)
- Korean: 즐기다 (ko) (jeulgida)
- Latin: oblector
- Polish: bawić się impf
- Portuguese: divertir-se
- Romanian: se distra (ro)
- Russian: наслажда́ться (ru) (naslaždátʹsja), весели́ться (ru) (veselítʹsja), развлека́ться (ru) (razvlekátʹsja), забавля́ться (ru) (zabavljátʹsja)
- Spanish: divertirse (es), pasárselo bien
- Swedish: ha roligt (sv), ha kul, ha skoj
- Turkish: eğlenmek (tr)
|
have fun
- Used to wish somebody a good and enjoyable time when they are about to do something.
wish someone a good time
- Arabic: اِسْتَمْتِعْ (istamtiʕ)
- Catalan: diverteix-te
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 祝你玩得開心/祝你玩得开心 (zhù nǐ wán de kāixīn)
- Czech: bav se (unformal), bavte se (formal)
- Dutch: veel plezier
- Finnish: pidä hauskaa sg, pitäkää hauskaa pl
- French: amuse-toi bien !, amusez-vous bien !
- German: viel Spaß!, gönn dir
- Greek: καλή διασκέδαση f (kalí diaskédasi)
- Hungarian: jó szórakozást (independent of formality and number), érezd jól magad (singular, informal), érezze jól magát (singular, formal), érezzétek jól magatokat (plural, informal), érezzék jól magukat (plural, formal)
- Icelandic: góða skemmtun (is)
- Italian: divertiti (singular), divertitevi (plural), buon divertimento
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: kos deg! (singular), kos dere! (plural)
- Nynorsk: kos deg! (singular), kos dykk! (plural)
- Polish: baw się dobrze!, dobrej zabawy!
- Portuguese: divirta-se, se divirta
- Romanian: distracție plăcută
- Russian: (жела́ю/жела́ем) хорошо́ повесели́ться (xorošó poveselítʹsja), (жела́ю/жела́ем) хорошо́ провести́ вре́мя (xorošó provestí vrémja)
- Scottish Gaelic: feuch gun còrd e riut (informal and singular), feuch gun còrd e ribh (formal singular; plural), gabh spòrs (colloquial)
- Spanish: diviértete! (es), pásatelo bien
- Swedish: ha det så roligt, ha det så kul
- Turkish: çok eğlen, çok eğlenin pl, iyi eğlenceler
- Ukrainian: (бажа́ю/бажа́ємо) до́бре повесели́тися (dóbre poveselýtysja), (бажа́ю/бажа́ємо) до́бре провести́ ча́с (dóbre provestý čás)
|