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  1. Dictionary
    mock
    /mɒk/

    verb

    • 1. tease or laugh at in a scornful or contemptuous manner: "opposition MPs mocked the government's decision" Similar ridiculejeer atsneer atderide

    adjective

    • 1. not authentic or real, but without the intention to deceive: "a mock-Georgian red brick house"

    noun

    • 1. mock examinations: informal British "obtaining Grade A in mocks"
    • 2. an object of derision: dated "he has become the mock of all his contemporaries"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. MOCK definition: 1. to laugh at someone, often by copying them in a funny but unkind way: 2. to make something…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of MOCK is to treat with contempt or ridicule : deride. How to use mock in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Mock.

  4. Mock definition: to attack or treat with ridicule, contempt, or derision.. See examples of MOCK used in a sentence.

  5. You use mock to describe something which is not real or genuine, but which is intended to be very similar to the real thing.

  6. MOCK meaning: 1. to laugh at someone, often by copying them in a funny but unkind way: 2. to make something…. Learn more.

  7. Definitions of mock. verb. treat with contempt. “The new constitution mocks all democratic principles” synonyms: bemock. see more. verb. imitate with mockery and derision. see more. adjective. constituting a copy or imitation of something. “boys in mock battle” synonyms: counterfeit, imitative. not genuine; imitating something superior. noun.

  8. n. 1. The act of mocking. 2. An object of scorn or derision: became the mock of his associates. adj. Simulated; false; sham: a mock battle. adv. In an insincere or pretending manner: mock sorrowful. Idiom: make/a mock of. To subject to ridicule; mock. [Middle English mokken, from Old French mocquer .] mock′er n. mock′ing·ly adv.