1[intransitiveI, transitiveT]MAKE FUN OF to laugh at a person or idea, and talk about them in a way that shows you think they are stupid 嘲笑,讥笑,嘲弄
scoff at
David scoffed at her fears.
戴维嘲笑她的恐惧。
Officials scoffed at the idea.
官员们都嘲笑这个想法。
‘You, a scientist!’ he scoffed.
“就你,还科学家!”他讥笑道。
2[transitiveT]British EnglishBrE informalEAT to eat something very quickly 狼吞虎咽地吃
She scoffed the plate of biscuits.
她一下子吃光了那盘饼干。
Examples from the Corpus
scoff• Initially this was scoffed at as farfetched conjecture, but gradually it has receivedgrudgingrespect and empirical support.• Now, as on other occasions, David had scoffed at her fears.• Reenie Kelleher, a New York native, scoffed at it for the first five winters she spent in Cambridge.• Many people scoffed at predictions that it would draw 12 million people a year by 1985.• But it seems we consoled ourselves by scoffing more chocs.• I left three pies in the fridge and someone's scoffed the lot!• In the morning they'd knocked the glass down and scoffed the lot.• She used to scoff the wholeplate when she came round.