English-Thai Dictionary
mock
ADJ ที่ แกล้งทำ ที่ จำลอง ขึ้น ปลอม ที่ เลียนแบบ fake fraudulent real genuin authentic ti-kang-tam
mock
VI เยาะเย้ย หัวเราะเยาะ เย้ยหยัน ดูถูก scorn ridicule scoff praise honour applaud yor-yoi
mock
VT เยาะเย้ย หัวเราะเยาะ เย้ยหยัน ดูถูก scorn ridicule scoff praise honour applaud yor-yoi
mock
VT เลียนแบบ ล้อเลียน mimic lian-beab
mock at
PHRV ล้อเลียน หัวเราะเยาะ lor-lian
mock up
PHRV เลียนแบบ จำลอง lian-beab
mock-up
N แบบจำลอง หุ่นจำลอง dummy model beab-jam-long
mocker
N ผู้ ล้อเลียน scorner pretender charlatan phu-lor-rian
mockery
N การล้อเลียน teasing kan-lor-rian
mockery
N การ เยาะเย้ย การ หัวเราะเยาะ การเย้ยหยัน การ ดูถูก scron ridicule scoff praise admiration kan-yor-yoi
mockery
N การ เลียนแบบ การล้อเลียน travesty parody lampoon kan-lian-beab
mockingbird
N นก อเมริกา ลาย สี ดำ และ ขาว nok-ar-me-ri-ka-lai-se-dam-lea-kao
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
MOCK
v.t. 1. Properly, to imitate; to mimick; hence, to imitate in contempt or derision; to mimick for the sake of derision; to deride by mimicry.
2. To deride; to laugh at; to ridicule; to treat with scorn or contempt.
As he was going up by the way, there came forth little children out of the city, and mocked him, saying, go up, thou bald head. 2 Kings 2:23; Mark 1 :34.
3. To defeat; to illude; to disappoint; to deceive; as, to mock expectation.
Thou hast mocked me and told me lies. Judges 16:1 .
4. To fool; to tantalize; to play on in contempt.
He will not
Mock us with his blest sight, then snatch him hence.
MOCK
v.i.To make sport in contempt or in jest, or to speak jestingly. When thou mockest, shall no man make thee ashamed? Job 11:3.
MOCK
n.Ridicule; derision; sneer; an act manifesting contempt. Fools make a mock at sin. Proverbs 14:9.
What shall be the portion of those who make a mock at every thing sacred?
1. Imitation; mimicry. [Little used. ]
MOCK
a.False, counterfeit; assumed; imitating reality, but not real. That superior greatness and mock majesty--
MOCKABLE
a.Exposed to derision. [Little used. ]
MOCKAGE
n.Mockery. [Not used. ]
MOCKED
pp. Imitated or mimicked in derision; laughed at; ridiculed; defeated; illuded.
MOCKER
n.One that mocks; a scorner; a scoffer; a derider.
MOCKERY
n.The act of deriding and exposing to contempt, by mimicking the words or actions of another. 1. Derision; ridicule; sportive insult or contempt; contemptuous merriment at persons or things.
Grace at meals is now generally so performed as to look more like mockery upon devotion, than any solemn application of the mind to God.
2. Sport; subject of laughter.
Of the holy place they made a mockery.
3. Vain imitation or effort; that which deceives, disappoints or frustrates.
It is as the air, invulnerable,
And our vain blows malicious mockery.
4. Imitation; counterfeit appearance; false show.
And bear about the mockery of woe
To midnight dances.
MOCKESON
n.The name of a serpent.
MOCKING
ppr. Imitating in contempt; mimicking; ridiculing by mimicry; treating with sneers and scorn; defeating; deluding.
MOCKING
n.Derision; insult.
MOCKING-BIRD
n.The mocking thrush of America; a bird of the genus Turdus.
MOCKINGLY
adv. By way of derision; in contempt.
MOCKING-STOCK
n.A butt of sport.
MOCKLE
[See Mickle. ]
MOCK-LEAD, MOCKORE
n.A sulphuret of zink, the same as blend, which see.
MOCK-ORANGE
n.A plant of the genus Philadelphus.
MOCK-PRIVET
n.A plant of the genus Phillyrea.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
MOCK
Mock, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Mocked; p. pr. & vb. n. Mocking. ] Etym: [F.moquer, of uncertain origin; cf. OD. mocken to mumble, G. mucken, OSw. mucka.]
1. To imitate; to mimic; esp. , to mimic in sport, contempt, or derision; to deride by mimicry. To see the life as lively mocked as ever Still sleep mocked death. Shak. Mocking marriage with a dame of France. Shak.
2. To treat with scorn or contempt; to deride. Elijah mocked them, and said, Cry aloud. 1 Kings xviii. 27. Let not ambition mock their useful toil. Gray.
3. To disappoint the hopes of; to deceive; to tantalize; as, to mock expectation. Thou hast mocked me, and told me lies. Judg. xvi. 13. He will not. .. Mock us with his blest sight, then snatch him hence. Milton.
Syn. -- To deride; ridicule; taunt; jeer; tantalize; disappoint. See Deride.
MOCK
MOCK Mock, v. i.
Defn: To make sport contempt or in jest; to speak in a scornful or jeering manner. When thou mockest, shall no man make thee ashamed Job xi. 3. She had mocked at his proposal. Froude.
MOCK
MOCK Mock, n.
1. An act of ridicule or derision; a scornful or contemptuous act or speech; a sneer; a jibe; a jeer. Fools make a mock at sin. Prov. xiv. 9.
2. Imitation; mimicry. [R.] Crashaw.
MOCK
MOCK Mock, a.
Defn: Imitating reality, but not real; false; counterfeit; assumed; sham. That superior greatness and mock majesty. Spectator. Mock bishop's weed (Bot. ), a genus of slender umbelliferous herbs (Discopleura ) growing in wet places. -- Mock heroic, burlesquing the heroic; as, a mock heroic poem. -- Mock lead. See Blende (a ). -- Mock nightingale (Zoöl.), the European blackcap. -- Mock orange (Bot. ), a genus of American and Asiatic shrubs (Philadelphus ), with showy white flowers in panicled cymes. P. coronarius, from Asia, has fragrant flowers; the American kinds are nearly scentless. -- Mock sun. See Parhelion. -- Mock turtle soup, a soup made of calf's head, veal, or other meat, and condiments, in imitation of green turtle soup. -- Mock velvet, a fabric made in imitation of velvet. See Mockado.
MOCKABLE
MOCKABLE Mock "a *ble, a.
Defn: Such as can be mocked. Shak.
MOCKADO
MOCKADO Mock "a *do, n.
Defn: A stuff made in imitation of velvet; -- probably the same as mock velvet. [Obs. ] Our rich mockado doublet. Ford.
MOCKADOUR
MOCKADOUR Mock "a *dour, n.
Defn: See Mokadour. [Obs. ]
MOCKAGE
MOCKAGE Mock "age, n.
Defn: Mockery. [Obs. ] Fuller.
MOCKBIRD
MOCKBIRD Mock "bird `, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The European sedge warbler (Acrocephalus phragmitis ).
MOCKER
MOCKER Mock "er, n.
1. One who, or that which, mocks; a scorner; a scoffer; a derider.
2. A deceiver; an impostor.
3. (Zoöl.)
Defn: A mocking bird. Mocker nut (Bot. ), a kind of hickory (Carya tomentosa ) and its fruit, which is far inferior to the true shagbark hickory nut.
MOCKERY
Mock "er *y, n.; pl. Mockeries. Etym: [F. moquerie. ]
1. The act of mocking, deriding, and exposing to contempt, by mimicry, by insincere imitation, or by a false show of earnestness; a counterfeit appearance. It is, as the air, invulnerable, And our vain blows malicious mockery. Shak. Grace at meals is now generally so performed as to look more like a mockery upon devotion than any solemn application of the mind to God. Law. And bear about the mockery of woe. Pope.
2. Insulting or contemptuous action or speech; contemptuous merriment; derision; ridicule. The laughingstock of fortune's mockeries. Spenser.
3. Subject of laughter, derision, or sport. The cruel handling of the city whereof they made a mockery. 2 Macc. viii. 17.
MOCKING
MOCKING Mock "ing, a.
Defn: Imitating, esp. in derision, or so as to cause derision; mimicking; derisive. Mocking bird (Zoöl.), a North American singing bird (Mimus polyglottos ), remarkable for its exact imitations of the notes of other birds. Its back is gray; the tail and wings are blackish, with a white patch on each wing; the outer tail feathers are partly white. The name is also applied to other species of the same genus, found in Mexico, Central America, and the West Indies. -- Mocking thrush (Zoöl.), any species of the genus Harporhynchus,as the brown thrush (H. rufus ). -- Mocking wren (Zoöl.), any American wren of the genus Thryothorus, esp. T. Ludovicianus.
MOCKINGLY
MOCKINGLY Mock "ing *ly, adv.
Defn: By way of derision; in a contemptuous or mocking manner.
MOCKINGSTOCK
MOCKINGSTOCK Mock "ing *stock `, n.
Defn: A butt of sport; an object of derision. [R.]
MOCKISH
MOCKISH Mock "ish, a.
Defn: Mock; counterfeit; sham. [Obs. ]
MOCKLE
MOCKLE Moc "kle, a.
Defn: See Mickle.
New American Oxford Dictionary
mock
mock |mäk mɑk | ▶verb [ with obj. ] tease or laugh at in a scornful or contemptuous manner: he mocks them as Washington insiders. • make (something ) seem laughably unreal or impossible: at Christmas, arguments and friction mock our pretense of peace. • mimic (someone or something ) scornfully or contemptuously. ▶adjective [ attrib. ] not authentic or real, but without the intention to deceive: a mock-Georgian red brick house | Jim threw up his hands in mock horror. • (of an examination, battle, etc. ) arranged for training or practice, or performed as a demonstration: Dukakis will have a mock debate with Barnett. ▶noun dated an object of derision: he has become the mock of all his contemporaries. DERIVATIVES mock a ble adjective, mock er noun ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French mocquer ‘deride. ’
mockery
mock er y |ˈmäk (ə )rē ˈmɑk (ə )ri | ▶noun ( pl. mockeries ) derision; ridicule: stung by her mockery, Frankie hung his head. • [ in sing. ] an absurd misrepresentation or imitation of something: after a mockery of a trial in London, he was executed. • archaic ludicrously futile action: in her bitterness she felt that all rejoicing was mockery. PHRASES make a mockery of make (something ) seem foolish or absurd: new technology is making a mockery of our outdated laws. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French moquerie, from mocquer ‘to deride. ’
mock-heroic
mock-he ro ic ▶adjective (of a literary work or its style ) imitating the style of heroic literature in order to satirize an unheroic subject. ▶noun (often as mock heroics ) a burlesque imitation of the heroic character or literary style.
mocking
mock ing |ˈmäkiNG ˈmɑːkɪŋ | ▶adjective making fun of someone or something in a cruel way; derisive: the mocking hostility in his voice made her wince. DERIVATIVES mock ing ly adverb
mockingbird
mock ing bird |ˈmäkiNGˌbərd ˈmɑkɪŋˌbərd | ▶noun a long-tailed thrushlike songbird with grayish plumage, found mainly in tropical America and noted for its mimicry of the calls and songs of other birds. [Family Mimidae (the mockingbird family ): three genera and several species, esp. the northern mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos ) of North America. The mockingbird family also includes the catbirds, thrashers, and tremblers. ]
mock moon
mock moon ▶noun informal term for paraselene.
mockney
mock |ney |ˈmɒkni | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Brit. informal a form of speech regarded as an affected imitation of cockney in accent and vocabulary.
mock orange
mock or ange ▶noun a bushy shrub of north temperate regions that is cultivated for its strongly scented white flowers whose perfume resembles orange blossom. [Genus Philadelphus, family Hydrangeaceae (formerly Philadelphaceae ): several species and hybrids, in particular P. coronarius. ]
mock sun
mock sun ▶noun informal term for parhelion.
mocktail
mock tail |ˈmäkˌtāl ˈmɑkˌteɪl | ▶noun a nonalcoholic drink consisting of a mixture of fruit juices or other soft drinks. ORIGIN 1930s: blend of mock (adjective ) and cocktail .
mock turtleneck
mock tur tle neck ▶noun a neck for a knit garment similar to a funnel neck but shorter and typically not as loose.
mock turtle soup
mock tur tle soup |ˈˌmɑk ˈtərdl ˈˌsup | ▶noun imitation turtle soup made from a calf's head.
mockumentary
mock u men ta ry |ˌmɑkjəˈmɛntəri |(also mocumentary |ˌmäkyəˈment (ə )rē |) ▶noun ( pl. mockumentaries ) a motion picture or television program that takes the form of a serious documentary in order to satirize its subject. DERIVATIVES mock u men tar i an |ˌmäkyəmenˈte (ə )rēən |noun ORIGIN 1960s: blend of mock and (doc )umentary.
mock-up
mock-up |ˈmɑk ˌəp |(also mockup ) ▶noun a model or replica of a machine or structure, used for instructional or experimental purposes. • an arrangement of text and pictures to be printed: a mock-up of the following day's front page.
Oxford Dictionary
mock
mock |mɒk | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 tease or laugh at in a scornful or contemptuous manner: opposition MPs mocked the government's decision. • make (something ) seem laughably unreal or impossible: at Christmas, arguments and friction mock our pretence at peace. • mimic (someone or something ) scornfully or contemptuously. 2 (mock something up ) make a replica or imitation of something. ▶adjective [ attrib. ] not authentic or real, but without the intention to deceive: a mock-Georgian red brick house | Jim threw up his hands in mock horror. • (of an examination, battle, etc. ) arranged for training or practice: mock GCSEs. ▶noun 1 (mocks ) Brit. informal mock examinations: obtaining Grade A in mocks. 2 dated an object of derision: he has become the mock of all his contemporaries. PHRASES make ( a ) mock of hold up to scorn or ridicule: stop making a mock of other people's business. DERIVATIVES mockable adjective ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French mocquer ‘deride ’.
mocker
mock ¦er |ˈmɒkə | ▶noun a person who mocks someone or something: a mocker of authority. PHRASES put the mockers on Brit. informal put an end to; thwart. • bring bad luck to: someone has really put the mockers on the team.
mockery
mock |ery |ˈmɒk (ə )ri | ▶noun ( pl. mockeries ) [ mass noun ] derision; ridicule: stung by her mockery, Frankie hung his head. • [ in sing. ] an absurd misrepresentation or imitation of something: after a mockery of a trial in London, he was executed. • archaic ludicrously futile action: in her bitterness she felt that all rejoicing was mockery. PHRASES make a mockery of make (something ) seem foolish or absurd: new technology is making a mockery of our outdated laws. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French moquerie, from mocquer ‘to deride ’.
mock-heroic
mock-heroic |mɒkhɪˈrəʊɪk | ▶adjective (of a literary work or its style ) imitating the style of heroic literature in order to satirize an unheroic subject. ▶noun a burlesque imitation of the heroic character or literary style.
mocking
mock |ing |ˈmɒkɪŋ | ▶adjective making fun of someone or something in a cruel way; derisive: he got jeers and mocking laughter as he addressed the marchers. DERIVATIVES mockingly adverb
mockingbird
mock ¦ing |bird |ˈmɒkɪŋbəːd | ▶noun a long-tailed thrush-like songbird with greyish plumage, found mainly in tropical America and noted for its mimicry of the calls and songs of other birds. ●Family Mimidae (the mockingbird family ): three genera and several species, especially the northern mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos ), of North America. The mockingbird family also includes the catbirds, thrashers, and tremblers.
mock moon
mock moon ▶noun Astronomy a paraselene.
mockney
mock |ney |ˈmɒkni | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Brit. informal a form of speech regarded as an affected imitation of cockney in accent and vocabulary.
mock orange
mock or ¦ange ▶noun a bushy shrub of north temperate regions, which is cultivated for its strongly scented white flowers, the perfume of which resembles orange blossom. ●Genus Philadelphus, family Hydrangeaceae (formerly Philadelphaceae ): several species and hybrids, in particular P. coronarius.
mock sun
mock sun ▶noun Astronomy a parhelion.
mocktail
mocktail |ˈmɒkteɪl | ▶noun chiefly N. Amer. a non-alcoholic drink consisting of a mixture of fruit juices or other soft drinks. ORIGIN 1930s: blend of mock (adjective ) and cocktail .
mock turtleneck
mock tur tle neck ▶noun a neck for a knit garment similar to a funnel neck but shorter and typically not as loose.
mock turtle soup
mock tur ¦tle soup ▶noun [ mass noun ] imitation turtle soup made from a calf's head.
mockumentary
mocku |men ¦tary |mɒkjʊˈmɛnt (ə )ri | ▶noun a television programme or film which takes the form of a serious documentary in order to satirize its subject.
mock-up
mock-up ▶noun a model or replica of a machine or structure, used for instructional or experimental purposes. • an arrangement of text and pictures to be printed: a mock-up of the following day's front page.
American Oxford Thesaurus
mock
mock verb 1 they mocked her accent: ridicule, jeer at, sneer at, deride, scorn, make fun of, laugh at, scoff at, tease, taunt; informal josh, rag on, pull /jerk /yank someone's chain. 2 they mocked the way he speaks: parody, ape, take off, satirize, lampoon, imitate, impersonate, mimic; informal send up. ▶adjective mock leather: imitation, artificial, man-made, simulated, synthetic, ersatz, fake, reproduction, dummy, sham, false, faux, spurious, bogus, counterfeit, inauthentic, pseudo; informal pretend, phony. ANTONYMS genuine. CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD See imitate . These notes show fine distinctions in meaning between closely related synonyms to help you find the best word.
mockery
mockery noun 1 the mockery in his voice: ridicule, derision, jeering, sneering, contempt, scorn, scoffing, teasing, taunting, sarcasm. 2 the trial was a mockery: travesty, charade, farce, parody.
Oxford Thesaurus
mock
mock verb 1 the local children taunted and mocked the old people in the home: ridicule, jeer at, sneer at, deride, treat with contempt, treat contemptuously, scorn, make fun of, poke fun at, laugh at, make jokes about, laugh to scorn, scoff at, pillory, be sarcastic about, tease, taunt, make a monkey of, rag, chaff, jibe at; Austral. /NZ chiack; informal kid, rib, josh, twit; Brit. informal wind up, take the mickey out of; Brit. vulgar slang take the piss out of; N. Amer. informal goof on, rag on, razz, pull someone's chain; Austral. /NZ informal poke mullock at, sling off at; dated make sport of. 2 they still mock the slow way he speaks: parody, ape, guy, take off, caricature, satirize, lampoon, imitate, mimic; informal send up, spoof. ▶adjective a mock leather armchair: imitation, artificial, man-made, manufactured, simulated, synthetic, ersatz, plastic, so-called, fake, false, faux, reproduction, replica, facsimile, dummy, model, toy, make-believe, sham, spurious, bogus, counterfeit, fraudulent, forged, pseudo, pretended; informal pretend, phoney. ANTONYMS genuine.
mockery
mockery noun 1 a note of mockery in his voice: ridicule, derision, jeering, sneering, contempt, scorn, scoffing, joking, teasing, taunting, sarcasm, ragging, chaffing, jibing; Austral. /NZ chiacking; informal kidding, kidology, ribbing, joshing; Brit. informal winding up; taking the mickey; Brit. vulgar slang taking the piss; N. Amer. informal goofing, razzing. 2 the trial was a mockery: travesty, charade, farce, parody, laughing stock, caricature, lampoon, burlesque, apology, excuse, poor substitute. CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD mockery, ridicule, derision These three words reflect increasing degrees of scorn. ■ Mockery is the least severe. While it is usually intended to humiliate (stung by her mockery, Frankie hung his head ), it can also express affectionate amusement (‘Liar, ’ he said with soft mockery ). It can also mean ‘a worthy object of mockery ’ in the phrase a mockery of (after a mockery of a trial, he was executed ), but the sense is usually considerably weakened, especially (however serious the subject ) in the cliché make a mockery of (modern technology has made a mockery of the 1959 Obscene Publications Act ). ■ Ridicule is more intense, the aim being not so much to provoke or tease the victim as to cause others to laugh at them (Puritans were frequently subjected to ridicule and abuse at the hands of their contemporaries ). ■ Derision is still crueller and more contemptuous (Eline would forget the hurtful words spoken in derision ). The phrase of derision is commonly used to qualify a description of a scornful noise (the answer was a snort of derision ).These notes show fine distinctions in meaning between closely related synonyms to help you find the best word.
mocking
mocking adjective a mocking smile: sneering, derisive, contemptuous, scornful, sardonic, insulting, satirical, sarcastic, ironic, ironical, quizzical, teasing, taunting. ANTONYMS friendly, open, good-humoured.
Duden Dictionary
Mocke
Mo cke Substantiv, feminin , die |M o cke |die Mocke; Genitiv: der Mocke, Plural: die Mocken fränkisch für Zuchtschwein
Mockturtlesuppe
Mock tur tle sup pe Substantiv, feminin , die |M o ckturtlesuppe …tœrtl̩ …|die Mockturtlesuppe; Genitiv: der Mockturtlesuppe, Plural: die Mockturtlesuppen englisch; deutsch unechte Schildkrötensuppe aus Kalbskopf hergestellt
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
mock
mock /mɑk |mɔk /動詞 ~s /-s /; ~ed /-t /; ~ing 他動詞 1 ⦅ややかたく ⦆(冷たい言葉 相手のまねで )…をあざける , あざ笑う , ばかにする ; ⦅書 ⦆〖直接話法 〗…と言ってあざ笑う (→say 他動詞 1a 語法 ); …をまねる , まねしてからかう ▸ The children are always mocking my dreams .子供たちはいつも私の夢をあざ笑っている .2 ⦅かたく ⦆〈物 事が 〉〈努力など 〉を徒労に思わせる ▸ The rock mocked all our efforts to climb .その岩にはどうしても登れなかった .3 〈人が 〉…を無視する ; 〈期待など 〉を裏切る ; 〈人 〉をだます ▸ mock the law 法を無視する 自動詞 «…を » あざける , あざ笑う , ばかにする «at » .m ò ck A ú p [ú p A ]Aの (実物大の )模型を作る .形容詞 〖名詞 の前で 〗1 模擬の ; にせの , まがいものの (↔real )▸ a mock interview 模擬面接 ▸ a mock trial 模擬裁判 2 (特に冗談で )にせの , 見せかけの 〈驚き 恐怖 憤りなど 〉▸ Emily screeched in mock indignation .エミリは怒ったふりをして金切り声をあげた 名詞 1 C ⦅英 くだけて ⦆〖通例 ~s 〗模擬試験 .2 C ⦅やや古 ⦆あざけりの的 , 笑いもの .3 C にせもの , 模造品 .4 U C ⦅古 ⦆あざけり ▸ make (a ) mock of A ⦅文 ⦆Aをあざ笑う, ばかにする 副詞 いかにも … のようで , うわべは ▸ mock sorrowful いかにも悲しげな ~̀ m ó on 〘気象 〙幻月 .~̀ ó range 〘植 〙バイカウツギ 〘芳香ある白花を付ける低木 〙.~̀ s ú n 〘気象 〙幻日 .~̀ T ú dor [Ge ó rgian ]チューダー [ジョージ ] (王朝時代の )様式の .~̀ t ú rtleneck [t ú rtle ]⦅米 ⦆タートルネックのセーター [シャツ ](⦅英 ⦆turtleneck ).
mock-
mock- /mɑk |mɔk /接頭辞 …のふりをしている ; …をまねた .
mocker
m ó ck er 名詞 C あざける人 .p ù t the m ó ckers on A ⦅英俗 ⦆Aを台なしにする, じゃまする .
mockery
mock er y /mɑ́k (ə )ri |mɔ́k -/名詞 複 -ies 1 U あざけり, からかい ; C 〖しばしば -ies 〗あざけりの言葉 [行為 ].2 C 〖通例単数形で 〗笑いもの, あざけりの対象 .3 U 〖時にa ~〗(へたな )模倣 ; まがいもの, にせもの ▸ go through a mockery of a trial 形だけの裁判を受ける 4 C 骨折り損, むだ .h ò ld A ú p to m ó ckery Aを笑いものにする .m à ke a m ó ckery of A Aをあざ笑う ; A 〈努力など 〉をむだにする ; Aが偽りであると証明する .
mocking
m ó ck ing 形容詞 あざける (ような ).
mockingbird
m ó ck ing b ì rd 名詞 C 〘鳥 〙マネシツグミ .
mockingly
m ó ck ing ly 副詞 あざけって, ばかにして, からかって .
mock-up
m ó ck- ù p 名詞 C (機械 装置などの )実物大の模型, モックアップ .