Examples of 'satirised' in a sentence

Meaning of "satirised"

Satirise (verb): To mock, ridicule, or criticize someone or something using satire. It involves using humor, irony, or exaggeration to expose and criticize vices or follies
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  • simple past tense and past participle of satirise

How to use "satirised" in a sentence

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satirised
American movies had satirised society for decades.
It satirised a dinner party organised by abolitionists with black guests.
The opera also heavily satirised the geopolitical landscape.
Guaire must meet these demands or else he will be satirised by them.
He further satirised it by releasing an entire album strewn with backmasking.
New lyrics were set to favourite melodies which satirised the cheeky abduction.
The witty piece satirised everything from contemporary politics to grand opera conventions.
These Mulready envelopes were not popular and were widely satirised.
He lost authority when he was satirised for neglecting his kingly duties of hospitality.
It satirised television and media oversaturation by attempting to instill " sensory overload " in its audience.
This prejudice has been satirised on a number of TV shows.
They satirised consumer society and sought to take their message to young workers and apprentices.
Pakistan asked Google to remove six YouTube videos that satirised its army and senior politicians.
This event was satirised by Voltaire in his novel Candide.
In practice, most such jokes reflect the views of outsiders to the systems being satirised.

See also

Writers of Yiddish literature variously satirised or sentimentalised Hasidic mysticism.
This satirised Scottish philosopher James Mill who attempted to develop his sons into perfect utilitarians.
Life Support was a comedy programme on Australia 's SBS network which satirised lifestyle television programs.
Canning 's poetry satirised and ridiculed Jacobin poetry.
A satirical magazine, it appears, can not be satirised.
But Hitler was also satirised in the clubs of Weimar Berlin.
Marvell took up opposition to the ' court party ', and satirised them anonymously.
Johnson as one of the figures satirised on a float created by anti-Brexit protesters in Manchester.
Like any set of ideas, it can be challenged, criticised, vilified, satirised and mocked.
Her bestselling novel, Red Pottage, satirised religious hypocrisy and the narrowness of country life.
The play satirised a wide segment of London society, including the literary world and its pretensions.
Both the theme and obsessive fans were satirised on The Chaser 's War on Everything.
The piece satirised Italian opera, which had become popular in London.
The British and American colony in Florence was satirised in her novel, Friendship 1878.
Ganzeer has repeatedly satirised Sisi 's brutal rule in comic books, graffiti and art installations.
In 1963, he satirised the Faroese politics of the interwar period in his novel " Leikum fagurt.
These advertisements were satirised by Labor ads depicting Cooper as a wild-eyed reactionary.
He is most literally satirised in a passage in Book 14, which Mitchell does not omit.

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