例句 |
caricaturenoun a poor, insincere, or insulting imitation of somethingthat TV network's reporting is a mere caricature of real journalism cartoon, farce, joke, mockery, parody, sham, travesty burlesque, comedylampoon, takeoffcounterfeit, fake, feigning, forgery, hoax, humbug, knockoff, phony(also phoney), pretense(or pretence), simulation homage, tribute a work that imitates and exaggerates another work for comic effectthe artist creates caricatures of famous paintings by replacing humans with cats burlesque, parody, put-on, rib, send-up, spoof, takeoff, travesty lampoon, mockery, satirecomedy, farce, humor, sketch, slapstick, squibdistortion, exaggerationimitation, impersonation, mimicking the representation of something in terms that go beyond the factsthe mayor has presented only a caricature of his opponent's views coloring, elaboration, embellishment, embroidering, embroidery, exaggeration, hyperbole, magnification, overstatement, padding, stretching amplification, enhancementfabrication, misrepresentationfudging, hedginghype, pufferysuperlative meiosis, understatement belittlement, disparagement, minimizing, poor-mouthing caricatureverbto copy or exaggerate (someone or something) in order to make fun ofcaricatured the supervisor's distinctive walk burlesque, do, imitate, mimic, mock, parody, send up, spoof, travesty lampoon, pasquinade, satirizederide, gibe(or jibe), ridiculeape, copycat, monkey, parrotduplicate, emulate, replicate, reproduceact, counterfeit, dissemble, fake, feign, pretend, sham, simulateelaborate, embellish, embroider, exaggerate, magnify, pad, play up, stretchamplify, enhance, enlarge (on or upon), expand, flesh (out), overdraw, overstate, put onmime, pantomimeimpersonate, perform, personate, play n.caricature, burlesque, parody, travesty mean a comic or grotesque imitation.caricature implies ludicrous exaggeration of the characteristic features of a subject.caricatures of politicians in cartoons burlesque implies mockery especially through giving a serious or lofty subject a frivolous treatment.a nightclub burlesque of a trial in court parody applies especially to treatment of a trivial or ludicrous subject in the exactly imitated style of a well-known author or work.a witty parody of a popular novel travesty implies that the subject remains unchanged but that the style is extravagant or absurd.this production is a travesty of the opera in 1712 |