"Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau" is a line from William Blake's poem "The Tyger." It suggests that even great thinkers like Voltaire and Rousseau may not fully comprehend the complexity and awe-inspiring nature of the world symbolized by the tiger in the poem. The repeated "mock on" emphasizes the idea that humans can only grasp a limited understanding of the divine and mysterious aspects of creation.
mock
To mock means 'to make fun of' and "Mock" is used to mean practice or pretend, as in "Mock Exams", a "Mock Debate", a "Mock Trial", things students could do in a school in preparation, perhaps, for the real thing.
mock friendly - pretending to be friendly
It means to mock
well what they they had to eat was mock everything really: mock goose, mock ham and even mock bread
to mock in a jokingly, but mean way
mock means dan
Alice Mock's birth name is Alice Dorothy Mock.
George Mock died in 2001.
Mock Drill means Practicing of smthg that can haapen in future so that can be easily deal with in actual
it means very rude
mock clock, schlock clock