This answer is written, as the OP requested, without regard to whether the word in question is a vulgar racial slur. That fact changes the situation significantly, so my purpose here is only to address the more general question of whether mocking someone's language is "abuse."
- Is mocking helpful? No.
- Is mocking in good taste? No, not usually.
- Is mocking allowed here? No.
- Should the comment have been deleted according to site rules and/or community guidelines? Yes.
- Is it rude? Probably somewhat. There are cases where people who are familiar with each other mock each other as a form of enjoyable banter, but it's likely not possible for the author to know that the person would be receptive.
- But is it abuse? No, not unless done persistently over time.
Abuse, when used to describe the actions of a person, is a very strong word in the English language. The connotation is that severe harm has been done. A single distasteful joke does not meet that high standard. A reasonable person can be expected to roll their eyes or make a disgusted face and move on if they dislike it.
Are we going to be a community that categorizes every possible offense as "abuse"? Or are we going to be a little more reasonable? It's fine if we want to be a community that prides itself on respect, but that can't mean that we treat every offense as something severe that should be punished with extreme prejudice. A community like that is untenable.
For a comment that's inappropriate but not abusive, choose one of the other flag reasons. "It's unfriendly or unkind," is probably applicable and less severe. I've used "It's no longer needed," on comments I believed were slightly over the line to much success and still think this is an appropriate use of it. And a custom flag will allow you to explain if you don't feel like it fits in any of the others.