Get Free Checker

How To Use Mocking In A Sentence

  • The rage and the disappointment of the admiral were beyond all bounds; what to him was the value of the capture of Aisa, of the Turkish alcaid, of the ten thousand of the baser sort; nay, what to him was the value of "Africa" itself when once again like a mocking spirit Dragut had glided beyond the sea horizon to devastate, to plunder, and to slay once more, the scourge and the menace of Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean
  • The awkwardness between them soon vanished when they began laughing and mocking the poorly produced film.
  • Even the more sentimental variations seem mocking.
  • He is beautifully made with graceful horns, a slinky, prism-like tail, and playful, though mocking and feral, eyes.
  • At his words, the mocking hauteur disappears from her gaze.
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • Call us a bunch of self-referential, mocking, postmodern deconstructionist ironicists, if you will. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, jobs figures still aren't dancing the jive yet, but prices are spiraling higher and higher, mocking the Fed's directorate for central planning.
  • His slight emphasis on the word "Lady" was definitely mocking.
  • The housebreaker's unclean face was still cheerful and mocking, although a slow worry had begun gathering at its edges. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
  • All the exquisite, surrounding obscurity was animated by that music, which continued in the distance, in the mystery of the leaves and of the stones, in the depths of all the small, black holes of rocks or walls; it seemed like chivies in miniature, or rather, a sort of frail concert somewhat mocking -- oh! not very mocking, and without any maliciousness -- led timidly by inoffensive gnomes. Ramuntcho
  • Although first cousin to the melodious mockingbird, a catbird's song is seldom musical.
  • To kill a mockingbird is a sin, Finch told his children, because it brings no harm to others. Gas Drilling
  • Concerned the President does not view gay men and women as "human beings whose lives, loves, and families are equal" to his own, Solomnese mockingly offered to "reintroduce" the LGBT community to their capricious ally in the White House. RedState
  • And he passed in boldly, and came out still mocking. THE MASTER OF MYSTERY
  • One look and I gave a mirthless laugh, mocking myself.
  • He occasionally invents grotesquely exaggerated success stories in a self-mocking parody of his frustrated bourgeois ambitions.
  • When celebs do such self-mocking things as this, you have to wonder if they get the joke.
  • Cuckoo kind, including orioles, mockingbirds, and creationists – spoke with one. Birdwatching for creationists - The Panda's Thumb
  • Mockingbird fans will find pleasure in character spotting. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not only is the Cape flush with cardinals, towhees, mockingbirds, catbirds, goldfinches and woodpeckers, its birds of the shore entice many a visitor here.
  • Its all ephemera and persiflage, as we sit mocking in the plumes as political gadflies who tell the truth.
  • Elizabeth curtseyed very prettily, though her eyes were slightly mocking.
  • However, we did not record egg puncture at mockingbird nests at either study site, which suggests also that this species was not parasitized.
  • A mockingbird sang nonstop, sometimes making up his own phrases, sometimes mimicking a bluebird, sometimes mimicking a titmouse.
  • He is scornful of modern gurus, or gu-RUS as he mockingly inflects the word, and tells tour pros, ‘If they can't beat you, they've got nothing to teach you.’
  • The distorted semblances of the trees on the other side were vaguely visible through it, mocking him cruelly in the emptiness.
  • -- I have often, I said, fancied that, besides the load of exuvial coats and breeches under which he staggers, there is another weight on him -- an atrior cura at his tail -- and while his unshorn lips and nose together are performing that mocking, boisterous, Jack-indifferent cry of "Clo ', clo'!" who knows what woeful utterances are crying from the heart within? Catherine: a Story
  • The reproach was lightly mocking and they both laughed.
  • In their long dresses, they stand in chorus lines next to the archers, and put them off with mocking chants and suggestive songs. Times, Sunday Times
  • I saw mockingbirds and bluebirds on my slow drive back, but grosbeaks, tanagers, kingbirds, and buntings are apparently not back yet.
  • Mocking illusions and treacherous visions of grace did not depart with the falling of the leaves.
  • The changed item could do harm to the author by mocking him or damaging his reputation.
  • The difficulty of adapting counterchange designs for patterns that were designed for pleater smocking is that your ratio of fabric to pleats is reduced.
  • The Third Man is very much a jape - a sardonic waltz set to the mocking gaiety of its infectious zither theme.
  • The mockingbirds have been at the winterberry hollies, more than half the berries are gone, but they fly away every time I try to get a photo taken of them. Mish Mash Monday-Late February Edition « Fairegarden
  • This is a far cry indeed from the Anzac's credo of self-mocking mateship and chiacking comradeship and two-up and beer shouts.
  • The Great Winchester Gun Riot of May 1908 almost sounds like a joke, a self-mocking send-up of the usually sleepy county town.
  • There was a peculiar gleam in his eyes, and a half-amused, half-mocking expression lurked on his inscrutable features. The Cryptogram A Story of Northwest Canada
  • Guess the "smocking" is a critical attribute for me, huh? Dress-Buying Behavior of Consumers - A Dress A Day
  • ‘I am one-hundred-percent male, my dearest,’ he said mockingly.
  • [94] The Filipinos have many mocking children's rhymes making fun of personal deformities, such as pock-marks, cross-eyes, very black skin, etc. Filipino Popular Tales
  • Nowadays, the term definitely is either self mocking or derisive depending on who uses it. Activist Judges
  • Our self-mocking domestic equivalent to America's invincible locomotive is the platoon of lawnmowers that shaved the Astroturf in the stadium during the opening ceremony of the Sydney Olympics.
  • But the oil sheikhs and Wahhabi sheikhs were viewed as men of the “tarboosh” and mocking them was necessary in Arab political literature, even in café discussions. Tuesday, January 27, 2009
  • Dallas police confirmed that because the mockingbird is the state bird, shooting or killing the mockingbirds is illegal. NBC Dallas-Fort Worth - News Top Stories
  • Roxy and Virgie, in their clean Sunday suits, loitered around the bridge behind the store, or strayed a little way up the Manokin brook, hearing the mocking-bird rend his breast in all the ventriloquy of genius. The Entailed Hat Or, Patty Cannon's Times
  • On ‘Stronger Than Me’ she berates her passive boyfriend, calls him a ladyboy and mockingly inquires: ‘Are you gay?’
  • The mocking part is easy indeed in a museum that seeks to persuade visitors they are not descended from apes. Times, Sunday Times
  • He said all this politely, but there was something unfeeling and mocking in his tone.
  • On day 3, there was a small mutiny by the Commodore, who positively refused to go any further and demanded a morning of slummocking in Guildford.
  • At this stage of your progress, if not before, you may be assured that some clever friend will come in, and hold up his hands in mocking amazement, and ask you who could set you to that "niggling;" and if you persevere in it, you will have to sustain considerable persecution from your artistical acquaintances generally, who will tell you that all good drawing depends on "boldness. The Crown of Wild Olive also Munera Pulveris; Pre-Raphaelitism; Aratra Pentelici; The Ethics of the Dust; Fiction, Fair and Foul; The Elements of Drawing
  • The throng of people was excited, jeering and mocking, jostling the two who held on to the man at the centre of it all.
  • He called to mind the peculiarities of the "tui" of the natives, sometimes called the mockingbird from its incessant chuckle, and sometimes "the parson," in allusion to the white cravat it wears over its black, cassock-like plumage. In Search of the Castaways
  • Down-sizing, delayering, outsourcing and reengineering haunt the suburbs as well as the inner cities, mocking the commitments and hollowing out the institutions which were once the lodestars of the salariat. Archive 2009-08-01
  • In the mining district, religious zeal was often counterbalanced by a skeptical, almost mocking, attitude.
  • I won't sink into pretension and argue that it is an art form, but I will say that it's far more than an omnium-gatherum of detritus, as its mocking gallery insists it is. Adam Hanft: Irving Penn, Twitter, and the Everydayness of Life
  • May be it was just because of her bad mood and hopeless situation but it seemed as if they were laughing sinisterly and mocking at her.
  • In Massachusetts winter residents include chickadees, nuthatches, woodpeckers, titmice, cardinals, and mockingbirds.
  • He made the other boys laugh by mocking the way the teacher spoke.
  • Her voice was bird-like, the trill of a mockingbird, ever changing, ever shifting.
  • The slow drawl was meant to be mocking.
  • The tempest's mocking elf Points to the shipman thus the unseen shelf He strikes on, only when the timbers start. The Dark Tower
  • As a result, modern elegies more often than not break with the decorum of earlier modes of mourning and become melancholic, self-centered, or mocking.
  • 'An anoother book coes it a "Hammer-dry-ad,"' said David, mockingly, 'soa theer yo are.' The History of David Grieve
  • The song can sound like hoots and whistles, in a repeating pattern similar to that of a mockingbird or thrasher.
  • All written material copyright bellis 2001 html is 60 cove design 40 me: * I think some kind of soundproofing material would be more effective in creating privacy: P Refrigerator an antique beauty which sits unplugged in my kitchen looking pretty and quietly mocking me like some kind of untamed gigolo. Boing Boing: September 1, 2002 - September 7, 2002 Archives
  • A fire burning low in the grate was the sole light of the apartment; its beams flashed mockingly on the somewhat showy Versaillese furniture and gilding here, in style as unlike that of the structural parts of the building as it was possible to be, and probably introduced by The Woodlanders
  • Russians feel passionately about their folk music, reflecting as it does values of courage, pride and love, as well as a self-mocking humour that is charmingly British.
  • His research is thorough, and his tone is fond, occasionally mocking.
  • The exercycle that sits next to my couch is pretty much mocking me while I eat pasta and beans and watch tv.
  • I am not able to iron the upper part of the sleeve on this one, so I just leave it wrinkled and it looks like smocking. Women's Dresses in Marcus Stone's Paintings (1840-1921)
  • Blackbirds, cowbirds, and mockingbirds are common companions throughout most of the year.
  • The reproach was lightly mocking and they both laughed.
  • The hateful dress was mocking me. Therefore, the last thing I ever did in that house was to fling that wretched dress into the cleansing fire.
  • The line his old enemy had e-mailed him returned, mockingly: Have the gates of death been opened unto thee? MR GOLIGHTLY'S HOLIDAY
  • Then, in a kind of mockingly Hegelian negation of negation, the very dimension of otherness is cancelled: one does it with oneself. The new feminists: lipstick and pageants
  • He's always mocking my French accent.
  • The corners of Ilmari's eyes lifted a fraction in slightly mocking concern. TO HIS JUST DESSERTS
  • They were mocking him because he kept falling off his bike.
  • Engines began to hum deep in the belly of the ship, but Boertousce's grin only widened, the lips peeling back as if mocking his efforts.
  • He also had some fun mocking an ill-favoured ginger-haired family: ‘There are some things in life you can't choose.’
  • Now he stands accused of inadequately pleading his position, of mocking the people, and is instructed to try again to seek their approval.
  • Because the smocking is done as an insert rather than at the top of the skirt front piece, the skirt length will need to be shortened.
  • Bachmann has been riding around Iowa in her bus, with Elvis music and her name emblazoned 25 times on the outside, mocking Obama for going to Camp David last weekend and burrowing in, while the country was roiling. NYT > Home Page
  • It seemed to look back at her mockingly, and eventually, she realized that she didn't have enough malice to withstand such devilry and took her defeat gracefully.
  • irreverent scholars mocking sacred things
  • He highlights the absurdities of his new hobby without blithely mocking. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the past year she has also been targeted by web trolls mocking her weight, dress sense and hairstyle. The Sun
  • Even if they wanted to, getting rid of the bird isn't an option -- the mockingbird is a protective species in NBC Washington - Top Stories
  • Thousands of mocking birds filled the air with music, and many a birdling started in its nest upon seeing brown eyes and blue, peering into its leafy hiding place. Bond and Free: A Tale of the South
  • Although Eric Earling is a name, albeit assonantal, is one which might pose a greater difficulty in mocking for those without a post-primary school education or a person with an anti-piscatory bent. Sound Politics: Did Darcy Burner Vote Republican in the 2000 Presidential Primary?
  • In the past year she has also been targeted by web trolls mocking her weight, dress sense and hairstyle. The Sun
  • I was allowed to attend the ceremony, to which I wore a beautiful pair of bottle-green velvet short trousers which Mum sewed for me, a pair of fire-engine red patent leather buckled shoes, white socks, and a little white shirt with smocking and a frilly round collar, extremely smart. Archive 2009-03-01
  • For weeks before the book came, sheafs of papers did: advance reviews, pictures of a man with the suggestion of a mocking smile, the dates of his visit.
  • Several boys began to sing along in a mocking tone, dragging out the word doll until it became two syllables: “William wants a do-oll, William wants a do-oll.” Failing at FAIRNESS
  • There are satiric songs mocking meanness and tyranny, songs in praise of drink and drinkers, while other pieces celebrate heroic feats of valour or of sport.
  • His mocking smile rattled her more than his anger.
  • If you know the word lexicographer, there’s a better-than-even chance you also know Samuel Johnson’s self-mocking definition of it: “a writer of dictionaries; a harmless drudge, that busies himself in tracing the original, and detailing the signification ofwords.” The Volokh Conspiracy » Guestblogging Dictionary Myths (Pt 4):
  • Smart sketches from a trio with a nice line in mocking the pretentious and self-important. Times, Sunday Times
  • He's undeniably attractive, with a sensuous mouth that twists with a thin, mocking smile.
  • His poor, mistreated will that he had been holding up to the scorn of himself and his friends, stood before him innocent, and his judgment walked off to prison with the unconfinable imp, imagination, dancing in mocking glee beside him. This Side of Paradise
  • Although first cousin to the melodious mockingbird, a catbird's song is seldom musical.
  • As far as this bike goes I originally was going to paint it flat black with hot rod flames but as I was mocking it up it really came into its own.
  • She dominated the compartment and decided to wield her power over me as well, mocking my stuttering Hindi and mothering me by forcing me to eat.
  • What a revenge that would be, the proud and haughty Roman, the greatest flunker of them all, the Roman of the caustic tongue and the all-seeing eye, actually clinging to his hand, stammering out his thanks ... the Roman whose mocking voice still echoed in his memory, "Don't dream, John, don't do it! Skippy Bedelle His Sentimental Progress From the Urchin to the Complete Man of the World
  • (I still remember how unclassy he was at the GOP convention-talking Palin up like she was legit and mocking Obama.) Giuliani pondering gubernatorial bid
  • He came off the course a little after noon, all philosophical smiles and self-mocking humour.
  • “You just have to say, ‘Cerveza, cerveza,’ ” the guy says, mocking a gringo Spanish accent. Down and Delirious in Mexico City
  • ‘Thank you,’ I said curtsying mockingly as we both laughed.
  • Mr. Simms explores a variety of other possible derivations, including lud, a minced and, as the OED says, mocking form of lord, and luds, a term for buttocks. No Uncertain Terms
  • They smiled when pleased, which was fairly often, and they laughed as well, but it was a kind of harmlessly mocking laughter, almost invariably directed at an act or an object-his undershorts with the cartoon pandas, for example-that they considered ridiculous. Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates
  • 'So you love him, do you?' Magda's voice was a mocking echo of my own.
  • I saw mockingbirds and bluebirds on my slow drive back, but grosbeaks, tanagers, kingbirds, and buntings are apparently not back yet.
  • His scaled lips pulled back in a mocking rictus of a grin. Brush of Darkness
  • The old priest raised his eyebrows, shot a mocking glance at my friend, and said, "Taihoa."
  • The fruits are red, blue, or black and are quickly consumed in late summer and early fall by finches, game birds, mockingbirds, thrushes, waxwings, and woodpeckers.
  • In the middle of another hour long mocking taunt of his dad for how much better this war was going, his mother belted him with a cheese grater.
  • In their long dresses, they stand in chorus lines next to the archers, and put them off with mocking chants and suggestive songs. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite her anticolonial prejudices, which shone through in her constant mocking of the declining empire and her Marxist cracks about “the mangy British lion,” Jane was allowed entrée into their social enclave. A Covert Affair
  • I found a pretty Laura Ashley jumper with smocking today at Goodwill! Smocked Summer Dress
  • And, while the little, laughing girls questioned them, in that mocking tone which girls, when they are in a troupe, assume ordinarily to interpellate boys, these smiled, and each one struck his chest which gave a metallic sound. Ramuntcho
  • In the heat of the moment few would have been able to ignore such mocking provocation. Times, Sunday Times
  • He made the boys laugh by mocking the way the teacher spoke.
  • I'd never associated her with any kind of wit, but these were joky and mocking, very amusing letters.
  • His slight emphasis on the word "Lady" was definitely mocking.
  • Strambo, and the other intimate friends of Pasquino, having noted in what manner she used the Sage, and this appearing as her utmost refuge, either to acquit or condemne her: in presence of the Judge they smiled thereat, mocking and deriding whatsoever she saide, or did, and desiring (the more earnestly) the sentence of death against her, that her body might be consumed with fire, as a just punishment for her abhominable transgression. The Decameron
  • Duke then ran the shot clock down and allowed Gray to mockingly lead his teammates in slapping the floor, a trademark of Coach K's defense. USATODAY.com - Scores
  • The ravioli lies flaccidly at the top of the plate; beneath it, in a mockingly straight line, are the four rabbit brains… Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail and Peter.
  • But listen to the mocking birde to micking barde making bared! Finnegans Wake
  • The huge shining assemblage grins at the spectator, a mocking mirror to insatiable greed. Times, Sunday Times
  • With a mocking gurgle, about a dram of "slumgullion" passed into his mouth. The Mascot of Sweet Briar Gulch
  • Perec was mocking the hollowness of the new consumer society before the sexual revolution.
  • When Johnson refers to his mind as ‘Summus… celsa dominator [in] arce ’, the elaborate periphrasis mockingly dramatizes the blustery ‘empty force’ of his mind's pretensions.
  • For the unchangeable God governs the world on the same unchangeable principles. thou shall lie in ... uncircumcised -- As circumcision was an object of mocking to thee, thou shall lie in the midst of the uncircumcised, slain by their sword [Grotius]. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Beyond Rush Limbaugh, the self-proclaimed "last man standing" against Obama worship, mocking Obama for, among other things, painting a wall in a homeless shelter in a call for national service as codling the poor, most criticism of Obama from the right takes the form of criticism of the financial bailout and the economic stimulus plan. Sheri and Allan Rivlin: Who Doesn't Like Barack Obama? -- Part 1
  • Was he mocking the idea of memorial greatness? Times, Sunday Times
  • Bristol Palin told People that Levi is "obsessed with the limelight" and his decision to star in a music video mocking her family played a part in their most recent breakup. Levi Johnston & Brittani Senser In 'After Love' Music Video: Did It Break Up Bristol & Levi? (VIDEO)
  • He was also in good humour, mocking his rusty memory about old lyrics and song arrangements. Times, Sunday Times
  • Exactly seventeen years later, I find myself in a head to head confrontation with the army, while the public at large is jeering and mocking me from the sidelines.
  • I saw mockingbirds and bluebirds on my slow drive back, but grosbeaks, tanagers, kingbirds, and buntings are apparently not back yet.
  • Cedar waxwings, crows, finches, flycatchers, grosbeaks, grouse, jays, mockingbirds, pheasants, thrushes, vireos, and woodpeckers feed on their fruits.
  • The sneer magnified on his face, then changed into mocking laughter.
  • As I watched in amazement, the partner gazed over her shoulder and gave me a big, mocking, self-satisfied wink.
  • Birds found here and in only few other places include white-bellied seedeaters Sporophila leucoptera, grassland yellow-finches Sicalis luteola, chalk-browed mockingbirds Mimus saturninus, tropical peewees Contopus cinereus, rufous-throated antbirds Gymnopithys rufigula, black-breasted puffbirds Notharchus pectoralis, and plain-bellied emeralds Amazilia leucogaster. Marajó varzea
  • I mimicked the innocent grin she displayed herself moments ago, mocking her now displeased demeanor.
  • The song can sound like hoots and whistles, in a repeating pattern similar to that of a mockingbird or thrasher.
  • ‘We all know,’ she says, adopting a mocking, orotund tone, ‘that dance is important.’
  • His memories are conveyed in the light, self-mocking tones of members of the officer class, who inhabit a world of snug bars, bachelor pads and the Times crossword.
  • Mrs Bean gave a mocking ghost of a laugh.
  • Now 80 years old, Mr. Shatner has built a persona that hovers somewhere between self-mocking scenery chewer and philosophical show-biz survivor. William Shatner Tackles A Familiar Subject: Himself
  • The Red Sweet Wine of Youth: The Brave and Brief Lives of the War Poets" is a book about "the impact of that war on the sensibility of the artist"; it also sets out to show that Sassoon et al were not necessarily antiwar but antiheroism, as in the mocking title of one of Wilfred Owen's most famous poems, "Dulce et Decorum Est. Versed in the Horror of War
  • He became determined to succeed as a writer, starting out as a journalist on a local newspaper in England, where he drew on his everyday experiences to write witty, mildly self-mocking columns.
  • Larger forest birds such as the grey kingbird, the streaked saltator, or the tropical mockingbird flit among the taller tree branches.
  • His 1987 album Sentimental Hygiene was the first he did largely sober, and included several songs worth relistening to, in light of this book's sinister revelations: "Detox Mansion," a feisty jab at celebrity rehab; "Trouble Waiting to Happen," a self-mocking account of blackouts and hangovers, and "Reconsider Me," arguably the finest I'm-sorry song ever written, featuring the repeated line: "And I'll never make you sad again/'Cause I swear that I've changed since then. James Ledbetter: I'll Sleep When I'm Dead: The Dirty Life and Times of Warren Zevon
  • The butterfly hair clip, however, lay with wings down on her dresser, as if mocking her resolve.
  • The housebreaker 's unclean face was still cheerful and mocking, although a slow worry had begun gathering at its edges. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
  • Flipping the rifle over his shoulder, Mattais sketched John a mocking salute.
  • Chris Matthews and Republican Congresswoman Michele Bachmann engaged in a feisty sparring contest on MSNBC, with Matthews getting so frustrated with Bachmann that he asked her is she was "hypnotized," and Bachmann's supporters holding up signs mocking the MSNBC host. Chris Matthews Asks Michele Bachmann: 'Are You Hypnotized?' (VIDEO)
  • She's a smart cookie, a ‘tough cookie,’ as one character mockingly calls her.
  • This, of course, is the self-mocking director helpfully reducing a decade of celluloid sensationalism down to cheap tabloid soundbites.
  • In their long dresses, they stand in chorus lines next to the archers, and put them off with mocking chants and suggestive songs. Times, Sunday Times
  • A few years ago, for instance, Cornell's dean of students stood side by side with leftist students as they torched copies of the Cornell Review, which had run an article mocking Ebonics.
  • I saw mockingbirds and bluebirds on my slow drive back, but grosbeaks, tanagers, kingbirds, and buntings are apparently not back yet.
  • It needs a little more mocking to be a good mockumentary.
  • It wasn't Gallipoli, but it was devilish and the mood at Army Headquarters (originally disbelieving, even mocking) became hard and angry. DARE CALL IT TREASON
  • Granted, I'm terrible at making beds, so that's not saying much when comparing to me, but put her daymaking skills against the Swedish champion bedmaker in a frenzied contest of making and mocking and many more m-words, and she'd still win. Bard Diary Entry
  • I gave each a mocking salute, driven by I don't know what tomfool bravado. The Black Company
  • As if in mocking comment, from the town behind came the klaxon of a train, then the rumble and clank of wagons passing over the bridge. LOOKING FOR THE SPARK
  • Eventually the city kids settle into a comfortable routine that vacillates between mocking their counterparts and helping them acclimate to their new surroundings.
  • I verbalise my shame in mocking his tears before and I think I regained the points I lost earlier.
  • Behind the mocking laughter lurks a growing sense of unease.
  • The ethical debate that underlies the legal and medical practice of female foeticide as practised in clinics is mockingly addressed in the family planning initiatives that have ironically triggered it.
  • They were incredibly sarcastic and mocking, and their general treatment of you was so demeaning.
  • MacTavish was heard to groan, "Oh, why tid I leave my home!" to which a voice responded in mocking antiphone, "Why tid you cross ta teep? The House with the Green Shutters
  • The even-spreading noon sun was accompanied by mocking cries of the fringed quetzal from the forests around the plantation.
  • And there is the longish face; and the rather thin, stuck-out moustache, shewing both lips which pout a bit; and there is the nearly black hair; and there is the rather visible paunch; and there is, oh good Heaven, the neat pink cravat -- ah, it must have been _that -- the cravat_ -- that made me burst out into laughter so loud, mocking, and uncontrollable the moment my eye rested there! The Purple Cloud
  • Generally, though, it's so self-mocking as to be a little endearing.
  • Game birds, mockingbirds, robins, and sparrows enjoy the juicy, sticky red fruits.
  • They left behind walls daubed with mocking graffiti. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whereas the Furies’ verse maintains a regular rhyme scheme and forms a coherent antiphonal structure of response and chorus, the mocking tone of their words moves their chorus away from the emotiveness of aria into the narrative realm of fiction that in the opera buffa is largely the domain of recitative. 'An assiduous frequenter of the Italian opera': Shelley’s Prometheus Unbound and the opera buffa
  • Because the smocking is done as an insert rather than at the top of the skirt front piece, the skirt length will need to be shortened.
  • The guide salaamed, half-mockingly, half-wondering at such eloquence, pausing in the passage to point into the side-caves that debouched to either hand. In The Time Of Light
  • He sits in the dark by a window with a sliver of light for a portrait mocking this apparent metaphor. Times, Sunday Times
  • A mockingbird trilled from atop a telephone pole.
  • Seminal Caucasian rappers like the Beastie Boys always seemed hyperconscious of their whiteness; when their first album came out in 1986, just about everyone assumed the Beastie Boys were mocking black culture. Chuck Klosterman on Pop
  • When they came to the valley, they found it beautiful exceedingly and passing all degree; and birds on tree sang joyously and the mocking-nightingale trilled out her melody, and the cushat filled with her moan the mansions made by the Deity, — And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say, The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • On Purim, we wear costumes and perform skits - mocking our hang-ups, idiosyncrasies, and worries.
  • UPDATE: Noemie Maxwell of Washblog chimes in merrily at comment #12 after mocking McMorris 'faith at this post about Peter Goldmark, McMorris' opponent. Sound Politics: Liberals Remain Miffed About Religion
  • Priss sighed with relief and blessed herself mockingly.
  • If you need to explain something, try mocking it up and prototyping it rather than writing a longwinded document.
  • Cedar waxwings, crows, finches, flycatchers, grosbeaks, grouse, jays, mockingbirds, pheasants, thrushes, vireos, and woodpeckers feed on their fruits.
  • Behind the hill, behind the trees, the green woodpecker – the yaffle – shouts his mocking, laugh-like call which in country weather lore is a sure sign of rain. Country diary: Wenlock Edge
  • Mocking your man in public creates a no-win situation.
  • And as she puts the question she stands still and gazes at him; -- her voice is no longer mocking: it has taken another tone, -- a tone soft as the long golden note of the little brown bird they call the _siffleur-de-montagne_, the mountain-whistler .... Two Years in the French West Indies
  • Sometimes a little elastic smocking or an obilike sash can camouflage a tummy. Oh No She Didn’t
  • Yards, greeneries, conservatories breathe a June like fragrance, and aviaries are vocal with songsters, mocked outside by the American mocking-bird, who chants all night under the full moon, as if day was too short for his medley. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 11, No. 22, January, 1873
  • The stitchers display dazzling skill and finesse, creating textured surfaces of petit point, needlepoint, beading, embroidery, appliqué, smocking and macramé.
  • She parried inquiries by saying mockingly, `It's because you're family, Richard. THE IMAGE OF LAURA
  • Francis gives a similar explanation for the exceptional mimicry of mockingbirds, suggesting that mimicry itself was not favored by natural selection.
  • Everything is in a never-ending state of flux, oscillating between life and death, mocking our every attempt at permanence.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):