0 past simple and past participle of jeer
1 to laugh or shout insults at someone to show you have no respect for them:
A rowdy crowd of 300 cheered, jeered and often drowned out the candidates.
People have had enough of seeing politicians jeering and yelling insults.
It has always been one of our main stock arguments which our opponents jeered at.
When, originally, he made his projections as to what he thought the immigrant population would be, he was jeered at.
That argument was a very fair one and it should not be jeered at.
Those who jeered that rail privatisation would never get rolling have already had to eat their words.