| 单词 | raillery | 
| 释义 | railleryn. 1.   a.  Good-humoured ridicule or banter, often disguising a serious purpose; teasing, mockery. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > banter or good-humoured ridicule > 			[noun]		 mirth1560 dicacity1592 jest1597 pleasantry1602 raillery1642 rallery1652 badinage1658 banter1660 disport1667 badinerie1712 rig1725 bantery1739 jokery1740 persiflage1757 quizzery1809 quiz1819 chaff1841 borak1845 barrackc1890 mickey-take1968 smack talk1989 bants2008 1642    J. Suckling Discontented Colonell  i. i. sig. B3/v  				Raylery apart Granivert, What accommodation shall we find here? 1656    A. Cowley Misc. Pref., in  Poems  				I am not ignorant, that by saying this of others, I expose my self to some Raillery. ?c1663    B. Whitelocke Diary 		(1990)	 143  				He was much addicted to drollery or raillery. 1679    J. Goodman Penitent Pardoned  iii. iv. 320  				Raillery may goe about to shame him out of his course. 1721    R. Wodrow Hist. Sufferings Church of Scotl. I.  ii. ii. 263  				The poor honest People, who were in Railery called Whiggs, from a Kind of Milk they were forced to drink in their Wandrings and Straits. 1782    J. Warton Ess. on Pope 		(new ed.)	 II. xi. 320  				The raillery is carried to the very verge of railing, some will say ribaldry. 1855    W. M. Thackeray Newcomes II. xxxiii. 298  				Not disturbed by the mess-room raillery of the Campaigner. 1871    R. Ellis tr.  Catullus Poems lxi. 127  				The countryman's Ribald raillery. 1908    G. K. Chesterton Man who was Thursday v. 96  				The men greeted him with good-humoured raillery as if they had always known him. 1951    L. P. Hartley My Fellow Devils xxxiv. 354  				One eyebrow lifted in humorous raillery, but his mouth did not quite smile. 1964    Educ. Theatre Jrnl. 16 191/2  				He is most at home in the satiric pamphlet, in its world of..lighthearted raillery and mordant abuse. 2006    Sunday Times 		(Nexis)	 1 Oct. (Culture section) 21  				Though the language is vigorous, the elaborate Irish insults are intriguing, there are times when the endless raillery could become tedious.  b.  An instance of this: a satirical, teasing, or mocking remark. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > banter or good-humoured ridicule > 			[noun]		 > piece or instance of jest1548 rallery1645 raillery1653 rally1659 banter1679 quiz1795 josh1878 1653    R. Boyle Let. 27 Sept. in  Corr. 		(2001)	 I. 149  				Though your late Contempt of Love & Women & the Railleries with which you threatened mee, in case I did what I may now doe only to Imitate You; give me both Cause & Rise enough to punish you. 1668    J. Glanvill Blow at Mod. Sadducism 146  				Fancy may be permitted its plaisance, and in-offensive raileries. 1710    J. Addison Whig Examiner No. 1. ⁋1  				There is a shocking familiarity both in his railleries and civilities. 1776    E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. Notes p. xxii/1  				It seems probable that the Alexandrians had irritated the tyrant by their railleries, and perhaps by their tumults. 1829    E. Bulwer-Lytton Devereux I.  i. ii. 12  				All his purposed railleries deserted him. 1872    M. D. Landon Saratoga in 1901 19  				John has borne their railleries in good part—always good-natured, always ready with a joke. 1927    Bull. Metrop. Mus. Art 22 274/2  				Those jovial Gothic craftsmen who..covered the margins of Bibles and prayer books with satirical drawings and railleries. 2000    Daily Tel. 		(Nexis)	 9 Nov. 10  				Mr Mandelson laughed loyally at Mr Blair's railleries at the expense of the Tories in general and Mr Hague especially.  2.  Abuse, invective; unpleasant or unkind criticism; taunting. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > invective or abuse > 			[noun]		 balec1220 ordurec1390 revile1439 brawlingc1440 railing1466 opprobry?a1475 revilingc1475 vituperation1481 vituper1484 vitupery1489 convicy1526 abusion?1530 blasphemation1533 pelta1540 oblatration?1552 words of mischief1555 abuse1559 inveighing1568 invection1590 revilement1590 invective1602 opprobration1623 invecture1633 thunder and lightning1638 raillery1669 rattlinga1677 blackguarding1742 pillory1770 slang1805 slangwhanging1809 bullyragging1820 slanging1856 bespattering1862 bespatterment1870 bad-mouthing1939 bad mouth1947 slagging1956 flak1968 verbal1970 handbagging1987 pelters1992 1669    Philos. Trans. 		(Royal Soc.)	 4 897  				This memorandum was due to those worthies, who,..in despight of calumny and raillery, have..deserv'd as great names..as they, who have adorn'd the best records of foregoing ages. 1672    G. Thomson Let. to H. Stubbe 1  				Your raillery and abusive language against those whose actions deserve not the least opprobrious speech from you. 1709    T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 		(1886)	 II. 180  				He fell into a great Passion, and began to call Names..He continu'd his Raillery. 1709    T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 		(1886)	 II. 193  				The very stile, wch is nothing but Raillery and Billingsgate. 1757    M. Postlethwayt Great Britain's True Syst. p. liii  				But we rarely find, that the severest Raillery, or most poinant Satyr, and personal Acrimony, have any other Tendency, than to make Men in Authority the more obstinate and pertinacious in their Misconduct. 1810    M. Brunton Self-control III. xxviii. 68  				Her eyes still bore traces of the tears she had been shedding, and, in dread of the merciless raillery of her aunt, she retired to her own room. 1852    H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin II. xxxiii. 197  				He kept back his strong impulse to proceed to immediate violence, and broke out into bitter raillery. 1899    E. Gosse Life J. Donne I. 44  				The poem closes with an outburst of splenetic raillery. 1949    H. Pearson Dickens xiii. 202  				He followed them for a mile on the opposite side of the road, being subjected all the way to much coarse raillery by the gang. 1988    M. Brodsky X in Paris 22  				It had finally dawned on her that such raillery, such savage mockery, was in fact a fixative, a straitjacket. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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