COPYto copy someone or something in a way that makes people laugh 滑稽地模仿
His style has often been parodied.
他的风格经常被人滑稽地模仿。
—parodist noun [countableC]
Examples from the Corpus
parody• For example, the ability to parody a style can be a usefulskill.• He made toys that parodied her innocentamusements and those of her brothers and she trembled when he raised his leonine voice.• Barry now parodies himself even better than SpittingImage.• Thus language begins to parody itself, and so does literature, as Joyce shows in the Ithaca section of Ulysses.• He parodied my gropingstumble across the stage to the podium and gathered up the skirt to revealhairy legs and bloomers.• The movieparodies such classics as "Gone with the Wind" and "Casablanca."• Four of them parody the fire brigade, pecking and pulling a piece of bread.• Some companies deliberately parodied the new trade-names, safe in the knowledge they would never be taken seriously.
Originparody1
(1500-1600)Latinparodia, from Greek, from para- ( → PARA-) + aidein“to sing”