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Satirist   /sˈætərəst/   Listen
Satirist

noun
1.
A humorist who uses ridicule and irony and sarcasm.  Synonyms: ironist, ridiculer.






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"Satirist" Quotes from Famous Books



... foolhardy might, To tread the steps of perilous despite. I first adventure, follow me who list, And be the second English satirist." ...
— Character Writings of the 17th Century • Various

... the only thing that holds up the picture of the past before our tired eyes. Litera scripta manet is a living truth. The next letter from Newman to Nicholson was written on 20th June, 1857. On 8th June of this year died Douglas Jerrold, dramatist, satirist, and author. Mr. Walter Jerrold tells us that, in 1852, he had accepted the editorship of Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper. It was said of this that he "found it in the street and annexed it ...
— Memoir and Letters of Francis W. Newman • Giberne Sieveking

... in the same or the following year. Here he ceases to be a poet floating and bumping against a ceiling. He is now ranging the heaven of the emancipated poets. Even when he writes of the common and prosaic things he now charges them with significance for the emotions. He is no longer a satirist and philosopher, but a lover. How well he conjures up the picture of the room in which his friend used to ...
— Old and New Masters • Robert Lynd

... other) writer to "sardonic divings after the pearl of truth, whose lustre is eclipsed in the display of the diseased oyster;" mere Billingsgate doesn't turn out oysters like these; they are of the Lucrine lake:—this satirist has pickled his rods in Latin brine. Fancy, not merely a diver, but a sardonic diver: and the expression of his confounded countenance on discovering not only a pearl, but an eclipsed pearl, which was in a diseased oyster! I say it is only by an uncommon and happy ...
— The Christmas Books • William Makepeace Thackeray

... slight in construction, it must be confessed) considerably more compact and interesting than the irregular narration which serves Byron to string together the bitter beads of his satirical rosary; but, at the same time, the aim and scope of the English satirist is infinitely more vast and comprehensive. The Russian has also none of the terrible and deeply-thrilling pictures of passion and of war which so strangely and powerfully contrast with the bitter sneer and gay irony forming the basis of the Don; but, on the other hand, ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 57, No. 356, June, 1845 • Various


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