及物动词嘲弄; 嘲笑,愚弄
及物动词
1. They derided his efforts as childish.
他们嘲笑他的努力是幼稚的举动。
deride的解释
1. 嘲笑:小山羊站在房顶上,看见一直狼从底下经过. 平常羊都是很害怕狼的,今天却开始嘲笑(deride)狼,谩骂狼.
2. 嘲笑,嘲弄:derelict 被弃的 | deride 嘲笑,嘲弄 | descend 降
3. 嘲弄:derequisition 解除接管 | deride 嘲弄 | deridingly 嘲笑地
4. 讥笑:doctors are often ridiculed in the plays . 医生们常在戏剧里被愚弄. | 17、 deride--讥笑 | they all derided his foolishness . 他们都讥笑他的愚笨.
1. 嘲弄;嘲笑;侮蔑
If you deride someone or something, you say that they are stupid or have no value.
e.g. Opposition MPs derided the Government's response to the crisis...
反对党议员嘲弄政府针对危机作出的反应。
e.g. This theory is widely derided by conventional scientists.
这一理论遭到了守旧派科学家的普遍嘲笑。
1. deride
1. Critics of my column may deride me for " making a fuss over a trivial incident ", for such cases are still rare on China's campuses.
2. A group of friends in a bar could deride something based on hearsay, without getting the facts right - then they would move on to the next topic.
3. Her notice has caused a stir among netizens, some of whom refuse to sit in judgment and others who deride her as materialistic.
4. Critics of the war on bad eating habits often deride it as a game for the rich and Michelle Obama.
5. deride
5. Critics deride Johnson as a bumbling buffoon but experts say he gives the Conservatives a real shot at unseating Livingstone.
6. Phrases in the beheading image deride the Chinese people, the student group letter said.
7. Democrats who normally deride Bush as an inarticulate buffoon now hail him as the finest public speaker since Demosthenes.
verb
1. treat or speak of with contempt
e.g. He derided his student's attempt to solve the biggest problem in mathematics