A comic (from the Greek κωμικός, kōmikos "of or pertaining to comedy" from κῶμος, kōmos "revel, komos",[1] via the Latin cōmicus), denotes a hybrid medium having verbal side of its vocabulary tightly tied to its visual side in order to convey narrative or information only, the latter in case of non-fiction comics, seeking synergy by using both visual (non-verbal) and verbal side in interaction. Although some comics are picture-only, pantomime strips, such as The Little King, the verbal side usually expand upon the pictures, but sometimes act in counterpoint.[2]
The term derives from the mostly humorous early work in the medium, and
came to apply to that form of the medium including those far from
comic. The sequential nature of the pictures, and the predominance of
pictures over words, distinguishes comics from picture books, although some in comics studies
disagree and claim that in fact what differentiates comics from other
forms on the continuum from word-only narratives, on one hand, to
picture-only narratives, on the other, is social context.[3]
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