Ridicule /(?)/

Rid·i·cule

Ridicule

n.
  1. An object of sport or laughter; a laughingstock; a laughing matter.
    [Marlborough] was so miserably ignorant, that his deficiencies made him the ridicule of his contemporaries.
    — Buckle.
    To the people . . . but a trifle, to the king but a ridicule.
    — Foxe.
  2. Remarks concerning a subject or a person designed to excite laughter with a degree of contempt; wit of that species which provokes contemptuous laughter; disparagement by making a person an object of laughter; banter; -- a term lighter than derision.
    We have in great measure restricted the meaning of ridicule, which would properly extend over whole region of the ridiculous, -- the laughable, -- and we have narrowed it so that in common usage it mostly corresponds to “derision”, which does indeed involve personal and offensive feelings.
    — Hare.
    Safe from the bar, the pulpit, and the throne, Yet touched and shamed by ridicule alone.
  3. Quality of being ridiculous; ridiculousness. [Obs.]
    To see the ridicule of this practice.

Ridicule

v. t.

imp. & p. p. Ridiculed; p. pr. & vb. n. Ridiculing

  1. To laugh at mockingly or disparagingly; to awaken ridicule toward or respecting.
    I 've known the young, who ridiculed his rage.

Ridicule

a.
  1. Ridiculous. [Obs.]
    This action . . . became so ridicule.