What part of speech is mockeries?

Mockeries can be categorized as a noun.

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Parts of speech

  • 1. mockeries is a noun, plural of mockery.

Inflections

Noun

What does mockeries mean?

Definitions

Noun

mockery - a composition that imitates or misrepresents somebody's style, usually in a humorous way
mockery - showing your contempt by derision
mockery - humorous or satirical mimicry

Examples of mockeries

#   Sentence  
1. noun We've become a mockery to the whole village.
2. noun I overheard their mockery.
3. noun As a result, he gets something which technically is correct, but in its essence is just a mockery.
4. noun This is a mockery of justice.
5. noun Mockery is the food of fools.
6. noun Humanity cannot be made equal by declarations on paper. Unless the material conditions for equality exist, it is worse than mockery to pronounce men equal.
7. noun The farm was bought by a wealthy salesman who had once served as the object of laughter and mockery when he was offered beer in a stocking.
8. noun Manzoni notes that when news of the sickness reached the city “anyone might suppose that there would be a general stir of disquiet, a clamor for precautions of some kind [whatever their real value] to be taken ... But one of the few points about which all the memoirs of the time agree is that there was nothing of the kind ... Anyone who mentioned the danger of the pestilence, whether in the streets, the shops or in private houses — anyone who even mentioned the word ‘plague’ — was greeted with incredulous mockery or angry contempt.”.
9. noun Human rights groups have rejected the vote as a mockery.
Sentence  
noun
We've become a mockery to the whole village.
I overheard their mockery.
As a result, he gets something which technically is correct, but in its essence is just a mockery.
This is a mockery of justice.
Mockery is the food of fools.
Humanity cannot be made equal by declarations on paper. Unless the material conditions for equality exist, it is worse than mockery to pronounce men equal.
The farm was bought by a wealthy salesman who had once served as the object of laughter and mockery when he was offered beer in a stocking.
Manzoni notes that when news of the sickness reached the city “anyone might suppose that there would be a general stir of disquiet, a clamor for precautions of some kind [whatever their real value] to be taken ... But one of the few points about which all the memoirs of the time agree is that there was nothing of the kind ... Anyone who mentioned the danger of the pestilence, whether in the streets, the shops or in private houses — anyone who even mentioned the word ‘plague’ — was greeted with incredulous mockery or angry contempt.”.
Human rights groups have rejected the vote as a mockery.

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