0 past simple and past participle of mock --
1 to laugh at someone, often by copying them in a funny but unkind way: --
Shaw spotlights the chanchadas, cheaply produced musical comedies that mocked the pretensions of the upper classes.
This emphasis was mocked by contemporaries.
He mocked elaborate church ceremonies, and he altered the nobles' external appearance, which was based on ecclesiastical custom, by ordering them to shave their beards and doff their kaftans.
They all reduce the grammar of the mocked variety to a stereotyped representation of the language.
The opponents not only dared criticise the most eminent representatives of the ruling power, but even mocked and ridiculed them.
The main actor, the ever-escaping grapevine louse, mocked all efforts to arrest it.
They might be detested or mocked, but they could certainly not be ignored.
Under cover of the margins, he subtly mocked the trial and its outcome.