1. lampooning - Noun
2. lampooning - Verb
of Lampoon
Source: Webster's dictionaryConsequently, the Senate while lampooning the huge sum to the tune of N10.3 Billion expended on only 600 Staff, said there must be a thorough audit of staff of the Commission with a view to ascertaining whether or not there are ghost workers. Source: Internet
It includes a raucous procession of floats and dancers lampooning current events or public figures and a bitingly satiric sermon (el sermo) delivered by the King himself. Source: Internet
Following Nixon's death in 1994, the strip was rerun with all the instances of the word "guilty" crossed out and replaced with "flawed", lampooning the media's apparent glossing-over of his image in the wake of his death. Source: Internet
Protestant propagandists across Europe found that music proved useful in generating class transcending social cohesion, and in lampooning Roman clerks and repressive monarchs. Source: Internet
SCTV writers responded by making the "crane shot" a ubiquitous symbol of production excess while also lampooning network executives who care nothing about artistic vision and everything for the bottom line. Source: Internet
Even western media so given to lampooning those tarred and feathered by western governments could not help but acknowledge the outpouring of grief. Source: Internet