How To Use Derisive In A Sentence

  • The birthers may have reached and passed their peak, though, thanks to the scrutiny, the derisive laughter, and the backlash from the overkill on the part of the wingnuts in the mainstream media like Lou Dobbs. That Settles That
  • Margot chuckled at the new use for the derisive term for malware tinkerers, and reminded herself to use it in her report. Short Story: "Fair Game"
  • Hugh knew that Luther would never say anything derisive about Shirlee, so that could not be the subject he was leading into. DANSVILLE
  • Nancy -- my bosun; ain't he a peach?" was the answer I got, and from the mate's manner of enunciation I was quite aware that "Nancy" had been used derisively. CHAPTER V
  • They were candidly surprised by how well it all turned out and my office no longer elicits derisive or doubting commentary.
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  • She grinned derisively while I seethed with rage.
  • Captain Bermudez, that past master of astrogational chicanery, gave a derisive chuckle. Perseus Spur
  • Nowadays, the term definitely is either self mocking or derisive depending on who uses it. Activist Judges
  • However, he is neither doctrinaire nor derisive toward his opponents.
  • Adam snorted derisively and stepped away and up the slope from Joe.
  • The Firvulag throng was now almost out of control, straining close to the platform on their side of the field and making an uproar of derisive twitters, growls, and a deep bourdon drone of humming that now reached a crescendo of maddening whole-tone intervals. The Golden Torc
  • Practitioners made it look up-to-date, however, by derisively highlighting the racism, colonialism, sexism and other failings that made past ages so inferior to their own.
  • This is probably where the derisive humor begins it's arc.
  • derisive laughter
  • In gang slang, the word "peanut" is used to derisively describe a rival gang member. ABC News: Top Stories
  • This notion merely induced derisive laughter.
  • Something unhealthy in our political system causes each president to be portrayed in the most vicious and derisive terms.
  • No longer need the ailing woman pass through the smiling derisive rows of courtiers, fearing their eyes, dreading the falling of her rose and catching her breath as she dissembled a vivacity that amused the King.
  • The horrible verse restarted, the tone at once gleeful and derisive, then gradually faded out as Bartlemy murmured a dismissal. THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
  • Many show the popular imagination at work, with jocular and sometimes grotesque names, names that betray attitudes -- amused, derisive, envious, sardonic, rejective. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VII No 2
  • My head felt like a cannon ball; my feet had a tendency to cleave to the floor; the walls at times undulated in a most disagreeable manner; people looked unnaturally big; and the "very bottles on the mankle shelf" appeared to dance derisively before my eyes. Hospital Sketches
  • I always find that any reference to a woman "creaming" (unless it's being said derisively) puts me off and throws me out of the story... because (I kid you not), it always throws me back to crude comments a certain highschool boy we both knew and didn't get on with used to make. Prude
  • When his neighbours twitted him with being too lazy to plow and sow, of "mooning" over books, and derisively sneered when they spoke of him as the Harvester of the Woods or the Medicine Man, David Langston smiled and went his way. The Harvester
  • They derisively call the embrace of gay culture "pinkwashing" - a conscious attempt to play down what they call violations of Palestinian human rights by Israel behind an image of tolerance. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • You can add our derisive noises to the swelling chorus.
  • I was pulled out of my trance as she let out a derisive snort.
  • Reviews for W. are all over the board (58% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes), but I suspect that marketing the movie as light and satirical as opposed to dark and derisive is very smart. Box Office Tracking: Max Payne Targets $20M | /Film
  • Cajoling by a minister was met with derisive jeers.
  • He stared at her, then curled his lip upward and snorted derisively.
  • It was strongly fortified and deemed so impregnable that the blind and lame were sent to man the battlements, in derisive mockery of the Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • `Sorry,' she repeated derisively
  • Of these Sturm und Drang is a slogan derived from a contemporary play by Friedrich Maximilian Klinger performed in 1777, while Klassik is a term dating from the late nineteenth century to match Romantik a des - ignation first used derisively for the Heidelberg group in 1808. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • What we are learning is that he is illiterate, as in his inability to properly read the word derisive from his teleprompter this weekend and in saying he didn't know how to say something in "Austrian". Latest Articles
  • The term neoconservative was first used derisively by democratic socialist Michael Harrington to make clear that a group, many of whom called themselves liberal, was actually a group of newly conservative ex-liberals. Introducing "Think Twice" Word Detection System To OpEdNews
  • In more institutionalized political cultures like Chile's or Mexico's, the term caudillo has become faintly derisive. The Return of the Caudillo
  • It was a short, derisive laugh, and I smiled in a confused manner at my phone.
  • Rest assured, I snorted derisively when that prat gobbed off on stage. The stupidity of youth
  • A year ago I was asked my opinion on the anointment of Xi Jinping as vice president and leader of the "party of princelings," as the new generation of Chinese Communist Party leaders is derisively called by some in China. China's Party of Princelings
  • To this end, helpful responses are mildly sardonic, while acerbic comments are scathing, derisive insults.
  • Answers can be serious, solemn, pithy, witty, biting, derisive, belittling…
  • If all goes well next weekend, his reign might end not with a bang but a derisive laugh.
  • ‘Very helpful,’ she said, with a tint of derisiveness, and opened the door.
  • Our men, clustering amidships, waved their hats and raised a derisive cheer. Chapter 25
  • Did they, too, intend it as derisive?
  • Howard apparently ‘raised derisive chuckles at least a dozen times’.
  • There was a short, derisive laugh.
  • Teal meant to be derisive, but the word plopped out of his mouth like a cork out of a bottle. The Saint in Action
  • a tendency to cleave to the floor; the walls at times undulated in a most disagreeable manner; people looked unnaturally big; and the "very bottles on the mankle shelf" appeared to dance derisively before my eyes. Hospital Sketches
  • Port and sherry of British manufacture, and the water with an incredible borachio, essence of tar; so that tea and coffee are but derisive names. Letters from the Cape
  • Even raising the issue draws derisive and dismissive responses.
  • But the most derisive comments of all were reserved for my arguments about the moral and legal restraints on the early colonists.
  • We know that she impressed those who knew her as absorbed in snobbish ambitions and petty resentments, and that she had as her chief ingratiating tribute a talent for mimicry, which is often the sport of an unloving and derisive soul. Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: Part IV
  • At the time, I took those words to heart, mostly because there was no voice in the media to simply laugh out loud in derisive response.
  • They discover that it's socially acceptable to flatter your bosses by day so long as you are blasphemously derisive about them while drinking with your buddies at night.
  • Acutely sensitive to what people thought of him and his game, his reputation as a great player was in such disrepair it seemed like everywhere he turned, he was being called derisive nicknames. One Season
  • Include as many hails of derisive laughter in your answer as possible.
  • Turn the question around for a moment: what are the advantages of the newswriting formula I have derisively labeled "he said, she said? Jay Rosen: "He Said, She Said" Journalism: Are We Done With That Yet?
  • What's peculiar is that town-and-country tweeds, sensible handbags and court shoes are exactly the clothes the current generation of middle-aged women derisively rejected - and may never have worn in our lives.
  • Once derisively referred to as the chanars (toddy tappers), the womenfolk of the community were never allowed to cover the upper portion of their bodies.
  • * I hope it is clear that wherever I use the word "fuckable" in all its permutations, I do so sarcastically, derisively even. Not "legless": Ten pairs of legs!
  • Their methods are always very slick and their message is always consistent and it's always delivered with the requisite derisive tone.
  • This is probably where the derisive humor begins its arc.
  • His confession was greeted with derisive hoots.
  • The missionaries could have laughed last, had that derisive sentiment been in them.
  • He was abusive, debauched, arrogant, derisive, intolerant, and possibly the loneliest man who ever lived.
  • He gave a snort of derisive laughter.
  • This answer came derisively from several places at the same instant.
  • Within the intelligentsia, a derisive and mildly hostile attitude towards Britain is more or less compulsory, but it is an unfaked emotion in many cases. Notes on Nationalism
  • The minister's speech drew loud snorts of derisive laughter.
  • He is not expecting any derisive letters in his mail.
  • One of the soldiers, a tall man with blonde hair, snorted derisively at her.
  • The British then used it in derisive reference to the “undisciplined” and “licentious” bumpkins of New England. A Renegade History of the United States
  • Steve nodded, and was turning away, when his eyes encountered those of the boy, who had evidently forgotten all about his "mither," and was grinning at him derisively, and in a way which made Steve's fingers tingle to tighten up into a fist and teach the lad a lesson. Steve Young
  • Spin your wheels, the sky turns downside up, the redtail hawk whistles derisively, and nothing moves forward. Hunting for lizards
  • The very idee wuz so weak and inconsistent that it made the man statute hysterical, and he bust out into a peal of derisive laughter, and I took my dollar and walked off, though I knowed enough could be said on this subject to make a stun statute hystericky. Samantha at Coney Island and a Thousand Other Islands
  • I snorted derisively from my spot in the darkest corner of the large room.
  • Conventionalizing maladjusted behavior may be good for ratings but the downside is the impact it has on the rest of us who have to endure the verbal abuse from a parent or derisive remarks from a girlfriend or bullying at school or the office. Vanessa Carmichael: Reality Women
  • Tlatoani (head honcho), cacique, and caudillo - these words glisten on the pages of the derisive gubernatorial lexicon.
  • She picked up the cabbage leaf with the fruit and flung them over the railings into a flower bed, where the butcher-birds and the bower-birds quarrelled over them, and the big, grey bird in the gum tree on the other side of the fence cachinnated in derisive chorus to Bridget's burst of hysterical laughter. Lady Bridget in the Never-Never Land
  • In his latest memoir he shares that he'd like to" recast "the welfare net that FDR and LBJ cast while rolling back what he derisively calls the" winner-take-all "market economy that Ronald Reagan reignited (with record gains in living standards for all). Brian Ross: Apparently, You CAN Fool All of the People All of the Time
  • I was puzzled by the recurrence, with slight variations, of this awkward group portrait and also by the exclamations of anger and the derisive snorts of 'Kaiser Bill!' that it elicited when I showed it to my elders, but, long before I had come to understand that the gentleman with the mustaches was the late emperor of Germany, the newspapers had lost interest in him, and his picture stopped appearing. The Kaiser and the Kritik
  • Yet that brief derisive stare pierced her to her soul.
  • Oh yes, the LOOMING energy CRISIS…when MAJOR oil deposits have just been found off the Gulf Coast…AND the fact that the majority of people merely laugh derisively at the chicken-littling about “global cooling” during your average New England winter which is accompanied by the gnashing of teeth and rending of clothes about “global warming” during summers in the desert southwest. Think Progress » Air America To Declare Bankruptcy, But Progressive Radio Remains Strong
  • He gave a short, derisive laugh, but the gleam in his eyes was bitter.
  • Only natives were on her deck, and the man steering waved his hand in derisive greeting and farewell. THE PEARLS OF PARLAY
  • People tend to be cynical and derisive towards romantic comedies.
  • Thus in 1945 George Orwell wrote about the rampant Anglophobia among left-wing intellectuals in his country: "a derisive and mildly hostile attitude towards Britain is more or less compulsory, but it is an unfaked emotion in many cases". Newmatilda.com - Comments
  • Let's examine: on Abbey Road, Lennon was guilty of the same "artsy"-ness you accuse Macca/Martin of: how about "Because" or "I Want You She's So Heavy" - Lennon was quite hands on re: those songs and did quite a bit of the "artsiness" you find so risible and of which you are so derisive - he just wasn't very good at it and didn't really strike any memorable tunes. Imagine no SUVs... I wonder if you can...
  • Why then is the President's proposal not met with hoots of derisive laughter, or perhaps with a grave suggestion that he be examined, so as to determine the cause of this delusional pattern of thought?
  • It is worthy of attention however, insomuch as it is comparatively lively and straightforward in style, contains certain truthful elements, and is characterised at times by a bold and derisive tone.
  • Many of the young people are cynical, even derisive, about their religion.
  • Kiddie care," she called the scaled-down plan, derisively, in private. TODAYonline
  • Last week, under questioning by Carnesi, prosecution witness Michael Finnerty, a former Gotti crew member, testified that on the day of the DiBono murder, he was told by Carneglia and a second member of the hit team to never tell anyone, "especially John Junior," that the diminutive McMahon, known derisively as The Midget, was part of the rubout team. Jerry Capeci: Intrigue at Gotti IV; Sammy Bull for the Defense?
  • He had always kidded her about her faith, but lately his tone had been more derisive, mocking.
  • And I've seen movies meant to be funny that have just made me cringe, as well as movies meant to scare me that have caused me to erupt in derisive laughter. Fave Five: Comedic Horror Movies
  • It should also be noted that Skinner's derisive attitude towards explanatory references to mental innerness stems, in part, not just from fears of explanatory regression but from his conviction that if the language of psychology is permitted to refer to internal processing, this goes some way towards permitting talk of immaterial mental substances, agents endowed with contra-causal free will, and little persons (homunculi) within bodies. Behaviorism
  • For better or worse, the current tone is skeptical, derisive and gross.
  • When he brief the Subcommittee, his answers were both evasive and derisive.
  • One was antonomasia, the usually derisive practice of describing an individual by a certain characteristic, then making it into a proper noun.
  • The fish man had explained in terms derisive, but plain, the difference between a fish man and a fisherman. Gentle Julia
  • To those who've forgotten that the man who coined the term agnostic was also Darwin's self-appointed "bulldog," fiercely defending his work and discovery against the jibes of a derisive, behind-the-times Church of England, it's worth remembering that Huxley in turn criticized Spencer for not only making agnosticism require a static, permanent doubt, but also for failing to underline some of the worst social consequences of religion. Christopher Lane: Debates About Agnosticism Are As Old As The Concept Itself
  • I want to kill a `monster buck "first," Twombley said with a derisive laugh. AFFLICTION
  • He was a good soldier: sour, carnaptious, and derisive, but when you hesitated at the bunker entrance, he would be there.
  • Derisively fashionable and abhorrently offensive "Hitler" mustaches will be complimented by Cover Girl enhancements. Charles D. Ellison: Open Letter to Kathleen Parker: You Went There
  • More difficult to explain is the laughter excited by scenes or narrations which we call ludicrous, funny, grotesque, comic; and still more so the derisive and contemptuous laugh. More Science From an Easy Chair
  • Today belles lettres both in French and English, is used rather rarely and the noun “belletrist” and the adjective “belletristic” have assumed a faintly derisive shade of frivolity and incon - sequence. LITERATURE AND ITS COGNATES
  • The acknowledgment was merely a snort and some derisive laughter.
  • Constable Kwesi Millington, the Taserman who seems to have more stories in his repertoire than Sheherezade, demonstrated yesterday how Dziekanski used it "combatively," prompting so many scoffing noises and derisive snorts from the audience that Thomas Braidwood had to call for order. Archive 2009-03-01
  • There was a short, derisive laugh.
  • And this is not because teaching is laborious -- though it _is_ laborious, and thankless, too, beyond all other occupations; but because a number and variety of causes, into which we need not inquire, have combined to throw ridicule upon him, who is derisively called the pedagogue -- for most men would rather be shot at, than laughed at. Western Characters or Types of Border Life in the Western States
  • In the interest of sparing feelings I have closed this entry to further derisive comments.
  • Then, with an inner laugh, knowing how this would affect her, he turned and gave her a derisive sneer.
  • A derisive cheer went up when the vehicle clipped a large boulder, ripping off the front fender. THE DEVIL'S DOOR
  • I suspect that we see a trace of this same expression in what is called a derisive or sardonic smile. The expression of the emotions in man and animals
  • These were the failed and false seekers, and other Ringists derisively referred to them as `godlings" or ` godchildren ". THE BROKEN GOD
  • Within the intelligentsia, a derisive and mildly hostile attitude towards Britain is more or less compulsory, but it is an unfaked emotion in many cases .... The Other McCain
  • People tend to be cynical and derisive towards romantic comedies.

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