Satirise in a sentence as a verb

You want to insult me, mock me, satirise me, print out the source code and wipe your butt with it; go ahead. That's part of what free software must allow.

Not a single founder would want their idea to appear on next years board of stupid ideas to satirise.

I think it was sarcasm to satirise the hypocrisy. “Isn’t it obvious?

> He obviously had a lot of cultural exposure to the US Which he has promptly gone on to satirise in the gangnam video. Oh the irony.

According to Wikipedia [1], le Carre said that he wrote the book to satirise the idea of spying as a romantic endeavour, and British nostalgia for ww2. He also said that he regarded it as one of his most authentic works.

Yes, I disagree with the author of the article, but the primary thing I intend to satirise is his angry tone. If you've felt that the Go community has been condescending, I hope the condescending articles get equally as many critics.

I thought dextorious's comment was intended to satirise both the people who complain about sexism in hacker culture, and the people who insist there's no sexism in hacker culture.

You probably aren’t interested because you have made up you mind already, but are you aware that the use of the watermelon smiles etc was in an article to satirise the kind of attitude that would use those terms? An article critical of outdated colonial attitudes.

Luckily, there is little need to satirise parliament, as they usually do a fine job of making themselves look utterly ridiculous without any external help. Every time I see footage of it these days I feel like I'm watching the worlds most boring medieval reenactment society.

You cannot satirise illiteracy or ignorance online without people assuming you are actually illiterate or ignorant.

> My standard rule is that to properly satirise or ridicule something, a story must simultaneously be a good example of target being parodied as well as having a strong parody element. The obvious counterexample that leaps to mind is Catch-22, which isn't a good war novel at all but is a brilliant antiwar satire.

My standard rule is that to properly satirise or ridicule something, a story must simultaneously be a good example of target being parodied as well as having a strong parody element. Starship Troopers tries to parody the military machine but it fails because its a terrible military action movie.

Hard enough that I think it is a classic contribution to the stereotypes of inflated ego newsreel presenters, which Hollywood loves to satirise, in my opinion because Hollywood is mocking, to their narrow and insecure view, a subspecies of acting which when done well, can so massively capture the greater audience than ever some most serious actors may manage to capture. This is a bit more than a little bit of geek knowhow and applied thought, but I think many geeks by virtue of sheer analysis without a obstruction of a ego, could be handily outperforming the supposedly inherent talent they are "meant" to possess.

Satirise definitions

verb

ridicule with satire; "The writer satirized the politician's proposal"

See also: satirize lampoon