¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Satirises
1. satirise [v] - See also: satirise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Satirises
Literary usage of Satirises
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Poems of William Dunbar by William Dunbar, George Powell McNeill (1893)
"DUNBAR CELEBRATES BERNARD STEWART, AND satirises DAMIAN, THE ABBOT OF TUNGLAND,
1507-8. Of one of Dunbar's poems printed at this time, "The Welcome to ..."
2. The Poems of William Dunbar by William Dunbar, Aeneas James George Mackay, George Powell McNeill (1893)
"DUNBAR CELEBRATES BERNARD STEWART, AND satirises DAMIAN, THE ABBOT OF TUNGLAND,
1507-8. Of one of Dunbar's poems printed at this time, "The Welcome to ..."
3. The Poems of William Dunbar by William Dunbar, George Powell McNeill (1893)
"DUNBAR CELEBRATES BERNARD STEWART, AND satirises DAMIAN, THE ABBOT OF TUNGLAND,
1507-8. Of one of Dunbar's poems printed at this time, "The Welcome to ..."
4. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1799)
"His " Essay on the Alliance between the Learned and the Great," gravely, but'keenly,
satirises the mean servility of the former, and the insolent tyranny of ..."
5. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable: Giving the Derivation, Source, Or Origin of by Ebenezer Cobham Brewer (1898)
"... this name satirises Guillaume Crétin, an old French poet in the reigns of
Charles VIII., Louis XII., and François I. ..."
6. "Polly Peachum": Being the Story of Lavinia Fenton (duchess of Bolton) and by Charles E. Pearce (1913)
"... THE BEGGAR'S PANTOMIME The Beggar's Pantomime—Woodward's skit on the rival
Pollies—Fielding's Historical Register for 30 satirises the Italian Opera and ..."