inglés » esloveno

mock·ing [ˈmɒkɪŋ] ADJ.

mocking laugh, laughter:

mocking
mocking

I . mock [mɒk] ADJ.

2. mock (practice):

II . mock [mɒk] SUST. ingl. brit. coloq.

IV . mock [mɒk] V. trans. (ridicule)

ˈmock-up SUST.

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
I take her point: beneath the surface chatter of mocking and sneering, dramatists often honour religion as a site of earnest human striving.
www.spectator.co.uk
He spoke in a mocking, singsong voice and patted his heart for emphasis.
www.counterpunch.org
He has often appeared with an innocent-acting female offsider, who is subjected to mocking and innuendo.
en.wikipedia.org
This led to a huge media frenzy with reporters and talk radio repeatedly mocking the team.
en.wikipedia.org
They were noisily mocking the cat, which kept glancing from one side to the other at them.
en.wikipedia.org
In mocking the adoption by a barbaric country of the cultural values of an advanced nation, it takes a tilt at the cultural aspects of imperialism.
en.wikipedia.org
Give me dreams of euphoria and the mocking laugh!
en.wikipedia.org
When she started doing a bit of radio and heard two presenters mocking her accent, she retrained her voice by recording herself reading the news from Ceefax.
www.dailymail.co.uk
The idiom is used when mocking a person's needless anxiety over an impossible, inconsequential, or inevitable matter.
en.wikipedia.org
People feel they should be free to practice their faith without derisory comments and others mocking what they believe.
www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk

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