Use "derisive" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "derisive" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "derisive", or refer to the context using the word "derisive" in the English Dictionary.

1. Fenton's remark drew derisive laughs.

2. People gives out derisive sound.

3. She gave a short, derisive laugh.

4. This notion merely induced derisive laughter.

5. There was a short, derisive laugh.

6. To play the orator derisive Dickens.

7. Jimmy gave a quiet, derisive laugh.

8. A storm of derisive applause broke out.

9. He gave a snort of derisive laughter.

10. His confession was greeted with derisive hoots.

11. He gave a snort of derisive laughter. Sentencedict.com

12. ‘The acknowledgment was merely a snort and some derisive laughter.’

13. A great derisive exhibition was held in Munich.

14. So absurd rodomontade , people nature can be anounced derisive.

15. It inspired derisive laughter and never improved my station.

16. The minister's speech drew loud snorts of derisive laughter.

17. He flushed hotly under the derisive grins of the bulldozer drivers.

18. The label “Allopath” was considered highly derisive by regular medicine

19. * Burlesquely Noun A derisive art form that mocks by imitation; a parody

20. Yet that brief derisive stare pierced her to her soul.

21. What does Crickets mean? (US slang, humorous or derisive) Absolute silence; no communication

22. Geoffrey turned to his admirers and Adherents with a roar of derisive laughter

23. The term Rabari, they felt, was less glamorous than Raika, even derisive.

24. * Burlesquely Noun A derisive art form that mocks by imitation; a parody

25. Our men, clustering Amidships, waved their hats and raised a derisive cheer

26. They flushed, however, when she burst into a shout of derisive laughter.

27. The missionaries could have laughed last, had that derisive sentiment been in them.

28. He wandered through derisive, if desultory, critique of Dick Cheney, then switched gears.

29. Usage notes [] (derisive cry) The phrase A hoot and a holler has a very different meaning to hoot and holler.The former is a short distance, the latter is a verb of derisive cry

30. A man is saved from drowning only to be shaken to death by a derisive crowd.

31. Wu Sun - fu sprawled back in his seat and showed his teeth in a derisive grin.

32. A derisive or contemptuous sound made by vibrating the extended tongue and the lips while exhaling.

33. Usually she did not care that they drove away me or anyone else younger with derisive shouts.

34. When Noah’s family and the animals were aboard, “Jehovah shut the door,” closing out any derisive jeers.

35. There were derisive remarks about Obama visiting India as the US salesman-in-chief rather than a statesman.

36. Often they simply acquiesced to the use of a derisive nickname given to them by their enemies.

37. Saying “that’s Bougie” is derisive: it’s used to mock the pretentious consumer habits of an aspirational social climber

38. Bluestocking (n.) also blue-stocking, 1790, derisive word for a woman considered too learned, traces to a London literary salon founded c

39. T he re is much derisive talk by clever sociologists and deconstructionists about the obsolescence of the ideal of A gentleman

40. Margot Chuckled at the new use for the derisive term for malware tinkerers, and reminded herself to use it in her report

41. Buttinsky (plural buttinskys or Buttinskies) (informal, derisive, Canada, US) One who is prone to butt in, interrupt, or get involved where they are not welcome

42. Buttinsky (plural Buttinskys or buttinskies) (informal, derisive, Canada, US) One who is prone to butt in, interrupt, or get involved where they are not welcome

43. But his "short, derisive bark" of a laugh, his Roman nose, and most of all his life with sharks[http://Sentencedict.com], were just the same.

44. The derisive term Coon, a shortened form of racCoon alluding to cunning, was used to refer to Native Americans, Whigs, and "sly rustic" types before being used to describe African Americans

45. ‘They discover that it's socially acceptable to flatter your bosses by day so long as you are Blasphemously derisive about them while drinking with your buddies at night.’ ‘There's more, much more, and it's all Blasphemously funny.’

46. Carpetbaggers was a derisive term that referred to northern merchants who arrived in the South in the early days of Reconstruction (1865 – 1877), the twelve-year period of rebuilding that followed the American Civil War (1861 – 1865)

47. ‘A fine example of Antonomasia is the name given a polygamist by his four wives in different towns: 'Seldom Seen Smith'.’ ‘One was Antonomasia, the usually derisive practice of describing an individual by a certain characteristic, then making it into a proper noun.’

48. Summary and Definition: Carpetbaggers was the highly derisive name given to Northerners who went South after the fall of the Confederate States of America (CSA) seeking personal, financial gain or political advancement during the Reconstruction Era following the American Civil War (April 12, 1861 – …

49. Breeder is a satirical term coined by homosexuals as response to decades of oppression, particularly for parents who purportedly overfocus on their children and allegedly abandon their previous friends and lifestyle; or to women who give birth to many children, often with the derisive implication that they have too many offspring