deride
suomi-englanti sanakirjaderide englannista suomeksi
ivata, pilkata
deride englanniksi
To at or mock (someone or something) harshly; to ridicule, to scorn.
(synonyms)
(RQ:Augustine City of God)'' beeing Augur, derideth the Auguries, and blames men for letting their actions relie vpon the voyce of a Crovve or a Davve.
(RQ:King James Version), ſaying, hee ſaued others, let him ſaue himſelfe, if he be Chriſt, y&868; choſen of in Christianity|God.
(RQ:Burton Melancholy) let them be proued, perjured, ſtigmatized, convict roagues, theeues, traitors, looſe their ears, be vvhipped, branded, carted, pointed at, hiſſed, reviled, and derided, vvith ''Ballio'' the baud in ''(w)'', they reioice at it, (..)
(RQ:Purchas Pilgrimes)|page=1119|passage=And thou Gallant, that readeſt and derideſt this madneſſe of ''Faſhion'', if thine eyes vvere not dazeled vvith lightneſſe (light I cannot call it) of ſelfe-reflected Vanitie, mighteſt ſee as Monſter-like faſhions at home, and a more faſhionly Monſter of thy ſelfe; (..)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost) of thir vvicked vvayes / Shall them admoniſh, (..) and ſhall returne / Of them derided, but of God obſervd / The one juſt Man alive; by his command / Shall build a vvondrous Ark, as thou beheldſt, / To ſave himſelf and houſhold from amidſt / A VVorld devote to univerſal rack.
(RQ:Baxter Christian Directory) 6. Directions against Prophane Deriding, Scorning, or Opposing Godliness|section=10|page=439|passage=Thou derideſt ''ſervants'' for obeying diligently their ''higheſt maſter''? and for doing diligently the greateſt, beſt and needfulleſt vvork in all the vvorld? And is this a good example for thy ovvn ſervants?
(RQ:Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress) alſo thought to drive avvay his diſtemper by harſh and ſurly carriages to him: Sometimes they vvould deride, ſometimes they vvould chide, and ſometimes they vvould quite neglect him: (..)
(RQ:Gibbon Roman Empire)
(quote-book)|series=of the Fathers|Library of Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church, anterior to the Division of the East and West|seriesvolume=I|location=Oxford, Oxfordshire|publisher=Henry Parker (writer)|John Henry Parker; London: (publishers)|John George and Francis Rivington|section=paragraph 9|page=92|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/confessionsofsau01augu/page/92/mode/1up|oclc=3937707|passage=I panted after honours, gains, marriage; and Thou (quote-gloss) deridest me. In these desires I underwent most bitter crosses, Thou being the more gracious, the less Thou sufferedst aught to grow sweet to me, which was not Thou.
(RQ:Chesterton Blake) Gladstone because he introduced very new-fangled legislation, they were also deriding him because he wore very antiquated collars.
(quote-web), who had actually rescued them with an equaliser in normal time after (w)'s superb opener for Italy.|footer=(small)
(RQ:Wood Life) II: |page=466|passage=Memorandum that about the year 1650 coffee and chocolate began to be frequently drunk in Oxon: and about 1655 a club was erected at Tilliard's where many pretended witts would meet and deride at others.
(inflection of)