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Discover LudwigThe phrase "mock for" is not a correct and usable phrase in English.
The correct phrase is "mocking for". This can be used to indicate ridicule or derision for a particular person, thing, or idea. For example: The crowd was mocking for the losing team.
Exact(28)
Joke about judges, like the "Cruise Director," whom they mock for roaming the halls.
Both volumes are easy to mock for their glibness, but both are candy-colored treats.
Managed competition had various advantages, but it had the big — possibly fatal — disadvantage of being easy to mock for being overcomplicated.
The traces of ancient invertebrates with astonishing names (crinoids, fusulinids, and so on) were just one of many signs that the landscape my coastal relatives used to mock for its monotony in fact harbored wonders.
Schmidt is married to Helen (June Squibb), whom we are invited to mock for her orderly ways; it is an especially cruel stroke, on the director's part, to kill her off as she cleans the house.
Iannucci had welcomed Blair's rise to Prime Minister, but still found much to mock; for a while, he wrote a column, for the Daily Telegraph, in the form of Campbell memos.
Similar(31)
Salazar was mocked for that.
At school, she was mocked for them.
Sure, he was mocked for it.
He was roundly mocked for the idea.
Wolfe was mocked for his lyricism and sprawl.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com