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Definition of mock
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of mock is as below...
Mock (v. i.) To make sport
contempt
or in jest; to speak in a
scornful
or
jeering
manner.
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Blackcap
::
Blackcap
(n.) A small
European
song bird
(Sylvia
atricapilla),
with a black
crown;
the mock
nightingale..
Feint
::
Feint (a.) A mock blow or
attack
on one part when
another
part is
intended
to be
struck;
-- said of
certain
movements
in
fencing,
boxing,
war, etc..
Quiz
::
Quiz (v. t.) To peer at; to eye
suspiciously
or
mockingly.
Joust
::
Joust (v. i.) A
tilting
match;
a mock
combat
on
horseback
between
two
knights
in the lists or
inclosed
field.
Mock
::
Mock (v. t.) To
imitate;
to
mimic;
esp., to mimic in
sport,
contempt,
or
derision;
to
deride
by
mimicry..
Flout
::
Flout (v. i.) To
practice
mocking;
to
behave
with
contempt;
to
sneer;
to
fleer;
-- often with at.
At
::
At
(prep.)
Relation
of
direction
toward
an
object
or end; as, look at it; to point at one; to aim at a mark; to
throw,
strike,
shoot,
wink, mock, laugh at any one..
Burlesque
::
Burlesque
(a.)
Tending
to
excite
laughter
or
contempt
by
extravagant
images,
or by a
contrast
between
the
subject
and the
manner
of
treating
it, as when a
trifling
subject
is
treated
with mock
gravity;
jocular;
ironical..
Frumper
::
Frumper
(n.) A
mocker.
Saxifragaceous
::
Saxifragaceous
(a.) Of or
pertaining
to a
natural
order of
plants
(Saxifragaceae)
of which
saxifrage
is the type. The order
includes
also the alum root, the
hydrangeas,
the mock
orange,
currants
and
gooseberries,
and many other
plants..
Bob
::
Bob (n.) To mock or
delude;
to
cheat.
Paraselene
::
Paraselene
(n.) A mock moon; an image of the moon which
sometimes
appears
at the point of
intersection
of two lunar
halos.
Cf.
Parhelion.
Skimmington
::
Skimmington
(n.) A word
employed
in the
phrase,
To ride
Skimmington;
that is to ride on a horse with a
woman,
but
behind
her,
facing
backward,
carrying
a
distaff,
and
accompanied
by a
procession
of
jeering
neighbors
making
mock
music;
a
cavalcade
in
ridicule
of a
henpecked
man. The
custom
was in vogue in parts of
England..
Jeering
::
Jeering
(a.)
Mocking;
scoffing.
Hoax
::
Hoax (n.) A
deception
for
mockery
or
mischief;
a
deceptive
trick or
story;
a
practical
joke.
Gird
::
Gird (v.) To sneer at; to mock; to gibe.
Naumachy
::
Naumachy
(n.) A naval
battle;
esp., a mock sea
fight..
Gauntlet
::
Gauntlet
(n.) A rope on which
hammocks
or
clothes
are hung for
drying.
Mockery
::
Mockery
(n.) The act of
mocking,
deriding,
and
exposing
to
contempt,
by
mimicry,
by
insincere
imitation,
or by a false show of
earnestness;
a
counterfeit
appearance..
Mockle
::
Mockle
(a.) See
Mickle.
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