英:[dɪ'raɪsɪvlɪ]
美:[dɪ'raɪsɪvlɪ]
英:[dɪ'raɪsɪvlɪ]
美:[dɪ'raɪsɪvlɪ]
词根:deride
adj.derisive 嘲笑的,嘲弄的;可付之一笑的
derisory 嘲弄的;嘲笑的
n.derision 嘲笑;嘲笑的对象
vt.deride 嘲笑;嘲弄
Adverb
1. in a disrespectful and mocking manner;
"`Sorry,' she repeated derisively"
see derision
The first known use of derisive was circa 1662
1 “You have to be adventurous,” Ms. Harper said, speaking not a little derisively of those in the crowd in their off-the-rack resort dresses.
2 Dissent was heresy, and heretics would be reprimanded or excommunicated — and not always with a smile, but often ironically, derisively, maliciously.
3 A resident of one town once derisively said of another city, "there's no 'there' there."
一个城市的居民嘲笑另一个城市时会说,“那儿没有‘那儿’这个概念”。
4 The Internet makes soul music that’s redolent of the mid- to late 1990s, just when hip-hop’s influence on R&B was beginning to congeal into what later became known, somewhat derisively, as neo-soul.
5 My high school was a modern orthodox Jewish day school where feminism was a word I heard used rarely and derisively.
6 This sub-genre, known derisively as spaghetti westerns, more or less ended in 1978 with China 9, Liberty 37, a Spanish-Italian production that can be seen as a fable about moviemaking itself.
7 He was quick and fast, so derisively and sarcastically they called him “Jethawk.”
8 The others laughed derisively.
其余的人不以为然地笑了起来.
9 Our heroine doesn’t exactly leap for joy when she’s enlisted in what she derisively calls the “chair force.”
10 Reaction from opposition lawmakers, many of whom abstained from the vote, was swift and derisive.
11 But his notorious anti-Semitic essay, “Judaism in Music,” published under his name the following month, soured the relationship, and Wagner and his wife, Cosima, began referring derisively to Viardot as a “Jewess.”
12 This answer came derisively from several places at the same instant.
好几个人都不约而同地以讥讽的口吻作出回答.
13 That the term is meant affectionately, or at least not derisively, says something about the shame and distaste that white girl culture still maintains around the notion of women who pursue men for money.
14 Kendall gets an accountant to cook the numbers, Cousin Greg corners a film editor he derisively calls "Mr. Snippy-Snip" as he forces him to manipulate Logan's video.
15 After Nick, behind Bernabe’s back, had derisively crossed himself, he walked around the store, describing the crime.
16 Not only does she list all the ways people derisively classified her work — as a lecture, a one-woman show, a TED Talk — she spoofs each mode.
17 Leocha said he expects airlines to ask the federal government to begin dismantling the few existing rules on the books, which they have derisively referred to as “command-and-control” regulations.
18 People in big launches and boats whoosh by them and derisively stick two fingers up.
19 Though he’s been derisively dubbed a “sacred cow” by some new envelope-pushers of the British stage, they tend to take for granted techniques labeled radical when Brook introduced them.
20 Trump — who likes to brand opponents with his own mocking nicknames — uses “Squad” derisively with what Jenkins calls scare quotes.
2 嘲弄
mocking teasing sardonic quizzical sneering mockingly quizzically tauntingly scoffingly jeeringly banteringly chaffingly shy tease irony ridicule taunt scorn banter scoff jest derision flout gibe jape badinage persiflage fleer railery guy ride mock rag jolly deride twit make mock of make merry of make merry over make a mock of take the mickey have a shy at make a shy at make a long nose at make a fool of derisive scoffing jeer