0 past simple and past participle of parody --
1 to copy the style of someone or something in a humorous way: --
One of the papers is running a competition in which you have to parody a well-known author.
Several songs were satirized and parodied in the episode.
The skit, a variation of an old vaudeville routine, has been parodied numerous times.
They have also influenced political style and discourse, literature, film and television and advertising, and have been widely parodied by humorists.
Her overwhelming social media presence is often parodied in the series.
The episode parodied several aspects of professional wrestling, highlighting the sport's emphasis on such theatrical elements as costumes, back stories and scripted storylines.
The song is parodied every year, and the last time we heard it sung we were told that it was not £777,000,000, but that it was no less than £2,000,000,000.
It is important for us to explain precisely what we favour, because our view has been rather parodied.
One may feel that such sentiments are old-fashioned, easily parodied and have little role in the professional modern police force of today.