Though affectionate mockery is nothing new, the golden age was relatively recently.
2
It seems such a mockery; but if she wishes it; and Arthur-
3
Thirty-two percent thought he would make a mockery of the political process.
4
I could sense it the same way I'd felt its mockery earlier.
5
But perhaps Falcao should be the subject of sympathy rather than mockery.
1
This parody however, has nothing of the sort of toys you'd imagine.
2
Comedian Eva Victor created a parody detailing exactly why that's the case.
3
Chua has said she meant much of the book to be parody.
4
The parody account has a lot of material about Russian hacking claims.
5
But our copyright law still has no exception for parody and satire.
1
ER: I started doing burlesque, April is going to make five years.
2
This grave scene was fully contrasted by the burlesque Duke of Newcastle.
3
Maskelyne often took the part of the burlesque spirit medium or wizard.
4
In this way neo-burlesque performers bring burlesque back to its theatrical roots.
5
EBONY: A lot of burlesque performers tour and perform away from home.
1
However, just six minutes later, takeoff contact with the aircraft was lost.
2
The lithium-ion batteries are used to boost power during takeoff and climb.
3
The suspect allegedly commandeered the aircraft 15 minutes after takeoff from Alexandria.
4
Before the problem is discovered, SAC readies its B-52 bombers for takeoff.
5
The valve slid shut and the takeoff bell reverberated through the ship.
1
Confident of my ignorance, he was willing to let the charade continue.
2
It's a step too far and now I'm done with the charade.
3
Reasons for Lady Stanton to suggest such a charade likewise escaped him.
4
Kesseley shot up, unable to bear one more second of this charade.
5
From the moment the ultimatum was accepted, the convention became a charade.
1
In a trial the top court in this state termed a travesty.
2
The fable in Greece originated in an intentional travesty of human affairs.
3
The party disagrees and has called the directive a travesty of justice.
4
The committee has been represented by critics as a travesty of democracy.
5
The Franco-Prussian War was in progress, and this travesty was particularly timely.
1
It's not possible to spoof the BFO data on just any plane.
2
By the way, anyone know how to spoof an IP in Joost?
3
Thomas maintains she is innocent and was the victim of a spoof.
4
Is this some kind of spoof South American acoustic metal band, perhaps?
5
The government must convince the jury that Coscia intended to spoof the market.
1
Writers cracks dark jokes about violence and lampoon those they hold responsible.
2
It is therefore a real masterpiece of satire, not a simple lampoon.
3
That approach triggered a quick-and-dirty lampoon by Australian TV comedian Dan Ilic.
4
I found the lampoon on my table this morning, among my letters.
5
These were choice morsels from the lampoon of the notary Danckaerts.
1
Perhaps the use of SparkNotes can be seen as a sendup of the prestige-prize economy, said Pitzer.
2
Now this outstanding Rachel-from-Friends sendup is making us really look forward to a Friends bit in Season 41 of the sketch comedy show.
3
His sendup of people combing back through old tweets and movies and TV shows for inevitable signs of moral impurity are similarly sharp.
4
The Faustian bargain of high-profile, publicist-driven journalism is ripe for sendup, but with so many broadly drawn characters, the film has no satiric bite.
1
Pardon, Senorita Isabel, Sunday comes not into a pasquinade.
2
The pasquinade was a very great one.
3
But though Frederic was diverted by this charming pasquinade, he was unwilling that it should get abroad.
4
Here is another pasquinade.
5
Leti, in his entertaining and gossipping life of this most merciless of Popes, tells a story of another pasquinade, which exhibits the temper of Sixtus.
6
If, as the old pasquinade had it the Barbarini did what the Barbarians did not, how much worse than barbarians have these modern civilizers done!
7
The air is full of real and false sweetmeats, pamphlets, pasquinades, and puns.
8
This does not prevent him from playing his pasquinades every night at the Vaudeville.
9
But, leaving the pasquinades of other people, let us come back to the sayings of Pasquin himself.
10
The only person who, apparently, remained quite indifferent to the storm of caricatures and pasquinades was Montanelli himself.
11
At the entrance booksellers stationed themselves, offering for sale Protestant catechisms, religious tracts, and pasquinades on the bishops.
12
Of whimsical and satirical epitaphs-someactually inscribed on tombstones, and others intended for pasquinades- alargecollection might be made.
13
The replies to the Doctor, the vindications of the Doctor, the pasquinades on the Doctor, would fill a library.
14
The most biting satires against the church, and the most lively political pasquinades, were thus expressed, and written almost always by churchmen.
15
"He is sick, sick to death of a galloping consumption-hewill not write any more pasquinades."
16
But the character of most of those pasquinades which belong to the pontificate of Leo is so coarse as to render them unfit for reproduction.