And how ironic that a lawyer should be outmaneuvered in the legislative process. |
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These albums tend to involve a fully ironic approach, as opposed to one that is merely satirical or parodic. |
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He conveys these moral tastes to the reader less by means of argument than by ironic indirection or aesthetic intimation. |
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Given the violent opening section of the book, that line is savagely ironic. |
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How ironic that a German footballer should provide us with sport's finest example of Schadenfreude. |
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The blogger's reaction to this is scornful, I think he wants it to be seen as ironic outrage, but scorn is what its written all over his post. |
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Some right-winger attempting to be ironic, some points hit a mark, some are hateful and off target. |
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The ironic thing is that he was a test pilot in the Navy and had several close calls in aircraft, but always survived them. |
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It is ironic that a word as cumbersome as tetrahydrogestrinone should be the name of a drug so easy to digest. |
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It's ironic because earlier in the day, I had to get somebody to etch his registration number in his screens because he asked for it. |
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It is ironic that arts in education appears to be something of a political bandwagon. |
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This is highly ironic from a Government that talks so much about understanding and supporting the third sector. |
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Perhaps even more ironic was our conversation about names and their meanings. |
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His measured and dignified prose is cool, lucid, and enlivened by ironic wit. |
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Their resemblance to thrones is an ironic reflection of the violent bases of power. |
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His eye for detail, his re-creation of dialogue, his ironic tone, his self-deprecation, all serve a memoirist well. |
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Or do you interpret it as more twisted and ironic, a bitter medley of weather criticism, tourist blurb, and the locals' proud assertions? |
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Some visions are so audacious, they can be expressed only as ironic jokes, lest the speaker be accused of pomposity or megalomania. |
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His Russian prose, too, though full of ironic tricks and intricate detail, tilted toward the sentimental. |
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A tonic resolution such as that at the end of this piece seems to me have quite an ironic quality. |
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He answered honestly, a small ironic smile touching his lips as he realized the double meaning behind his words. |
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The ironic tourist treated the tourist trap not as an authentic space, but as a copy of the real. |
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In a sense, since I still can't watch with ironic or benumbed remove, my fright speaks well of a film's potency. |
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He was smiling an ironic smile since he pitied himself for all the years of shallowness he had grown so used to. |
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It is also ironic that, despite the dominance and visibility of reactionary traditionalists, liberal traditionalism is still thriving. |
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That's an honorable but perhaps ironic stance for a company which is big on its own inventiveness. |
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In silhouette, Grant also looked the part, with gravity-defying, ironic quiff and long tremulous limbs. |
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What's ironic about the shortness of the story mode is that the levels of play are actually pretty long. |
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His rare lyrical quality bears emotional depth without sickly sweetness, and sly humour without jokey or ironic irritants. |
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When he thought something ironic, he would let out a high-pitched shrill laugh that sounded like a hyena. |
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His rendition eliminates entirely the bitterly ironic and surreal imagery of a rotting, burning body hanging from a tree. |
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It is ironic, then, that the origins of this curious term are shrouded in mystery. |
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Surely, it immediately seems ironic they should want to marry, when it is a religious ceremony, being blessed under God. |
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Basic forms like blousons or trench-coats, shirts or T-shirts, skirts or pants, are always enriched by new unexpected, ironic elements. |
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I just think that someone might consider blowing his brains out for ironic humor's sake. |
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Usually records of this sort are unbearably cutesy or too steeped in ironic smugness to be enjoyable. |
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On an ironic note, I wonder how many of the people in those mobs have iPods with illicitly downloaded MP3s on them. |
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Australians love ironic nicknames and may call you Bluey because of your red hair. |
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There was also some guy wearing boat shoes, but again, I don't think it was ironic! |
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In fact, he sees an ironic side to the chill that has descended upon the nascent digital-marketing industry. |
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Many see the casting as ironic because Wickham is something of a bounder who eventually elopes with one of the Bennett girls. |
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It is ironic that his tomb effigy should show him brandishing an unsheathed sword. |
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All this postmodern self-referential ironic navel-gazing is getting a bit bizarre. |
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I'll argue, as well, that where there is ironic discourse, snark cannot be far behind. |
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Most ironic though, is the South African barbecue, or as we call it, the braai. |
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Was this the brainchild of ironic liberal bureaucrats at the Treasury Department? |
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And for all their alleged ironic detachment and urbane wit, they never got the joke. |
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Clearly this is a high-concept, ironic, no-motion aesthetic, maybe even Brechtian. |
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His voice dripped with ironic sarcasm, as he spared a moment to glance at her. |
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It's a vigorous language, by turns colloquial and formal, precise, even-toned, elegant, sly, ironic, subtle and funny. |
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It would be ironic if the commuters had tried to escape from one vomiter only to run into the path of another. |
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Yeomans plans to wait and hear the vox populi only after the report is written, an approach Rotrand views as ironic. |
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His obsession with place and status had brought his career to an ironic and tragic end. |
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The plot of a film noir, generically speaking, is an ironic romance in which the knight's quest is driven by vice instead of virtue. |
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I find it ironic that now there is a campaign to give these places privileged tax status. |
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This switch is darkly ironic, because hippos are now much rarer than African elephants. |
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It is sadly ironic that now there may have to be a criminal investigation over a very similar matter. |
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This need for multimedia madness is a little ironic when you consider that the handphone is a hot possession among teenagers today. |
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How ironic, you of all people, giving someone else a lecture on how to treat friends. |
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How ironic that this former hate-monger is now editorializing against hate-mongering! |
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It's ironic that so many people use a patriarchal and racist ideology to critique what they think is an engine of oppressive authority. |
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It seems oddly ironic that one could build an exterior of strength, that being strong seems strangely easier than being weak. |
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That you praise a doctored photo as being more truthful than words strikes me as particularly ironic, if not Orwellian. |
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The project is even a little ironic, considering the history of the discipline of geography. |
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He had himself been sentenced to death for highway robbery, making Turpin's death at his hands especially ironic. |
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His fiction is characterized by a densely referential and ironic style and by a preoccupation with the act of writing itself. |
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It seems ironic that some would criticize the military for providing that opportunity when they chastise other departments for failing to. |
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To then have other parts of the country, some not so far from that Otago area itself, hit by floods is rather ironic. |
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She has been called Chekhovian in that she writes the comedy of ironic twists and hidden intentions. |
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With all this eccentric wordplay under review, an ironic summation is in order. |
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The superficiality of this interview is an ironic prelude to the depths we will watch the characters experience later. |
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Now it's a little hard to imagine honeymooning here except in an ironic way. |
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And there is a whiff of ironic retro cool in wearing a rebuilt 1950s housedress or baking pink cupcakes from scratch. |
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The first is that these albums tend to involve a fully ironic approach, as opposed to one that is merely satirical or parodic. |
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Overflowing with symbolism and ironic dialogue, the film is beautifully washed in grey light. |
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A sluggish middle leads to a humorous and ironic ending as the dancers swap their threadbare garb for sequinned hipsters. |
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The fact that she is an impostor makes an incredibly ironic point about hypocrisy. |
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The distance between culture and nature is ideally suited for ironic commentary. |
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Yerby's characterization of Fancy is, therefore, ironic, emphasizing the ignoble origins of most Southerners. |
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It is ironic that the country which gave the world logic should produce this most illogical of sports results. |
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What makes it so ironic is that most of these colonists are of Scottish ancestry. |
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By an ironic twist of fate, each of the four sides in the hat must face up to a derby match on the deciding Saturday. |
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Yet by an ironic twist of fate he is blind to the world around him, losing Dot, who is expecting his child, to a pastry maker. |
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His critically acclaimed band Playgroup brought live electro to the club long before ironic mullets and fauxhawks became de rigueur. |
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In Britain, we know how to nurture an ironic infatuation with signs of difference, status and style. |
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Paul writes a letter of ironic rebuke, using corrective language and ridicule, much like a parent finding a child in a compromising situation. |
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The play culminates with an ironic and chilling suggestion of religion corrupting innocence. |
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The ironic in this form is wilful innocence, just as the innocent sentimentality of the confessionary talk show is brute, cynical narcissism. |
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They make a similarly ironic point about the confluence of minimalist forms of art and the larger imperatives of social and economic power. |
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But he is not, in fact, a savage intellect doling out ironic, icy wit all around him. |
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Yet Matthew, 36, also intends his pieces to function as an ironic comment on the aspirations of society. |
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It's ironic that a conservationist should so smugly place his own interests above the lives of the animals he destroys. |
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We contemplate the photographic image, how it is a site of loss and remembrance, the life preserved in it an ironic reminder of death. |
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It's ironic that a brand born out of a beach-house fantasy of abandoning the rat race has served only to pleasantly complicate their lives. |
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It seems ironic to me that those who preach tolerance are so intolerant of those who do not share their liberal views. |
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It is ironic, but if we want to develop Inuktitut as a working language we need to be highly literate in English and possibly French. |
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As a fan of both ironic clothing and corporate faux grassroots campaigns, I ordered one right away. |
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Her latest role is an ironic reflection on her debut, when she played a young girl who falls for an American painter. |
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That was, if you like, an ironic and paradoxical appreciation of the transgressive. |
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It seems strange and spooky and ironic, though it is merely the operation of the law of averages. |
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It is neatly ironic, but it also exposes the paradox at the heart of this solo show. |
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There was, I concluded, some reason for ironic pride in this rather mediocre revelation. |
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But perhaps the gods of irony thought that this just made things all the more ironic. |
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It was just a tiny bit too ironic for it not to make me smile, and when I did he felt it and pulled away. |
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Measured anger and ironic humour is perfectly set against cracking beats by the master rap music producer. |
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In a few moments, Ramon's eyes widened and an ironic little smile passed his lips as he nodded his head slightly. |
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Setting the agenda in this way for the arts does, of course, have its ironic side. |
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More ironic is that an anti-theist institute should bear all the hallmarks of a religion or ideology. |
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How ironic then that some women writers sneer at men who enter therapy's allegedly feminised milieu. |
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Men getting glammed up and lip-synching to bad pop music just has an almost irresistible ironic appeal. |
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By combining the arch floridness of Victorian prose with a present-tense, subtly ironic style, Gray has created a distinctive voice. |
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A white boy dancer must deliver an impotent, but ironic, rendering of White's orchestration of potent sexuality. |
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Gilbert and George were the forebears of an artistic generation that holds everything to be ironic. |
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So it's pretty ironic that the average NBA player couldn't make a foul shot if his sneaker contract depended on it. |
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This is actually kind of ironic since I first read it in the print edition but cut and pasted the text from the online edition. |
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They have rubbishy foam sofas and the odd ironic beanbag, or leather pouffe. |
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It is ironic that after he guided the national team to a rare LG Cup triumph in 2002, there is an effort now to ease him out. |
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Part of him finds it ironic that she's been so close all this time, practically a neighbor. |
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It enlightens without preachment, and lets the dramatic or ironic prose merge seamlessly with the musical numbers. |
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It is ironic that these years of intense activity and growth were also years of spiritual darkness for Jane. |
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Lucy thought it very ironic that gargoyles were supposed to be ugly to serve their purpose, but whenever she saw one she considered it adorable. |
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Well, the ironic thing is that there are gay pride marches being held right now on Pennsylvania Avenue across the street. |
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However, the seeming pointlessness of the gesture is the key to its ironic effect and the reason why it enjoys a kinship with Ferry's work. |
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In an ironic counterpart to the trend of offshoring programmer jobs to India, the business of writing about programming is also on the move. |
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It's also pretty ironic that the promoters of these events don't list the tobacco companies in their sponsors list like they do everyone else. |
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That was an aberration, one of those ironic blips that sport throws up from time to time. |
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For Camus, the recognition of absurdity cannot be shrugged off with an ironic smile. |
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But it's very ironic to me that this is a White House that has not been particularly helpful to the press, and now they're jawboning the press. |
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Tight jorts, Toms, and either an ironic T or a tank top is like the hipster guy uniform here. |
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It is a bit ironic how all little girls want to do is grow up and all adults want to do is be young again. |
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He can go head to head and throw intellectual punches, or deliver rapier wit with ironic finesse. |
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In addition, the ironic echo also displays a syntactic shift by changing the first clause to a negative and the second to an affirmative. |
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It's a little ironic that the star once known for his raw and uncompromising comedy, has appeared in two PG-rated films this summer. |
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It was ironic, because having just left Thatcherite London behind, I returned to Dublin where we had imported Thatcherism wholesale. |
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The article gives an intriguing and powerfully written reading of the ironic positioning of such films. |
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In an ironic rebuff to communications technologies, the bill passed the Senate by unanimous, oral vote. |
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There's only one thing that's worse than kitsch and that's fashionably ironic kitsch. |
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He considered his work neither ironic nor kitsch, being convinced of its artistic seriousness. |
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The ironic thing is that when younger women get all that work done, they end up looking older. |
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In Milan Kundera's clumsy new novella, a portentous, worn-out philosophy that borders on the ironic and absurd stands in for real thinking. |
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Some critics have also found it ironic that many people who purchase bottled water end up refilling the containers from a tap. |
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Ford's figures are reflective, capable of ironic detachment, and can be both enthused and diffident at the same time. |
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Director Peter Evans highlights the play's wry humour and latent evil with a low-key, ironic spin. |
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It is somewhat ironic that the last great monument of the house of Wessex was mainly a product of Norman culture. |
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It's a CD of music from the Swiss alps I bought at a flea market one Sunday when I was in an ironic mood. |
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Although his intent behind using these words was ironic, rightists threatened him with legal action. |
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What makes all this more ironic is that these exhausted women were the original Amazons, the warrior caste Alexander supposedly would not fight. |
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For other Latinas and Latinos, the bestowal of posthumous citizenship was bitterly ironic. |
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The Agronomist is a clever title, one that rings with truth as well as ironic wordplay. |
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Each page of The Finishing School is alive with her customary ironic, dry wit, and yet she somehow leaves the reader thirsty for more. |
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It is ironic that in an issue devoted to the preservation of salmon you glorify the ritualistic hunting and consumption of them. |
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This has resulted in extraordinarily ironic and linguistically complex forms of popular music. |
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Like all the poems in the cycle, it is cast as a rondel, with an ironic refrain. |
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Following the logic of postmodern criticism, we could assume a level of ironic distance. |
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It's ironic, but it's mobile telephones that have killed the art of conversation. |
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Some modern scholars have described the boy players as ironic figures who highlighted the artificiality of gender roles. |
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How ironic that in this family, the runaway in question is a parent, not some rebellious teenager. |
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The ironic love-hate relationship between mother-daughter reveals itself in a most depressing way. |
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There is frequently something ludic, ironic, provisional, taking place here. |
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It is a sad story and ironic in a way because so many French couples don't want children. |
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Isn't it also ironic that though church attendances are in decline there appears to be a move to increase the number of church schools. |
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The play's often epigrammatic language can be ironic, bitter, philosophical, and even lyrically tender. |
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In Socratic rendition, the themes of autochthonous origins and the political equality it had traditionally authorized receive an ironic twist. |
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He is a listener rather than a talker, and sympathetic in an amused, ironic way. |
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An ironic and sarcastic grin flashed upon her oval face as she announced the name of the horse. |
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Let's face it, we smarmy and sarky Brits will throw in a bit of ironic drollery at the drop of a hat. |
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It's ironic that the saxophone is well known while the sarrusophone is obscure. |
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It does not seem to have struck the organisers as at all odd or ironic that a sustainable development summit should have alighted on this city as its venue. |
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Waldman overlays her comic situations and satiric conversations with ironic literary allusions and witty wordplay. |
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So you had to get the ironic attitude toward the media before you could grasp the satiric manhandling of the politicians. |
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The ironic painterly stroke and the disembodied functional object are a perfect Pop pair. |
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The really ironic thing is, once I get the tires reinflated I have to cycle down to the bike shop anyway to get the gears fixed on the darn thing! |
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It's a romantic melodrama that's not the least bit ironic nor schmaltzy. |
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Perhaps he was being deeply ironic, although of all the many qualities one associates with John Motson, a facility for gentle irony does not usually figure among them. |
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There is a perceived incongruity between the film's dark, fetishistic side and its ironic and humorous jabs at squeaky-clean middle-class America. |
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Which is ironic when a lot of the problem for government in getting shiftless bastards to vote right now is getting them to go down to polling stations in, er, libraries. |
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What we are being given as ironic spectators of this staged act of spectatorship is a complex chain of fabricated misrepresentations as generators of identity. |
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I find it ironic that someone once so dedicated to moving the Yoruba into the modern, postcolonial world would be so unaccepting of the results of that globalizing trajectory. |
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The hard-bitten cynic and skeptic smiles with inward pride when his friends chuckle over his well-wrought and ironic disdain for conventional pieties. |
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The exclusivity of parts of Egypt is a bit ironic, as history has had perhaps no more popular travel destination. |
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Percy expresses her own disbelief not by direct pronouncements but with ironic juxtapositions. |
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It's ironic that this apotheosis of flash over substance comes at a time when the public is hungering for greater perspective and deeper understanding. |
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It's even more ironic that Stephens would harp on Khaled Jaber's name given that his own family name is itself an adopted one. |
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Shareholder groups are increasingly important as challengers of irresponsible corporate governance, but there is an ironic and dangerous vicious circle here. |
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With these techniques Johnson effectively but trickily conveys his ironic and multivocal vision and makes his narrator successfully write himself into the text. |
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That was similar in that we were taking her deeply ironic and intelligent and cerebral group of stories and fleshing them out into this big strange movie. |
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In a sense, ironic circumstances seem to be still bird-dogging the Klitschko brothers whether these fluent linguists are speaking English, German, Russian or Ukrainian. |
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The Western appropriation of communist kitsch thrived during the Cold War, for purposes both earnest and ironic, and it has not abated since then. |
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It would be a little ironic if it was, seeing as the movie is constructed as a series of episodes along the route to the perfect noodle restaurant. |
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But of late, the Academy has been in a more detached, ironic mood and has turned its back on middlebrow uplift. |
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Hands are used regularly, albeit that several exhibits carry the request Please Do Not Touch, a somewhat ironic stricture in the tactile land of the pop-up book. |
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Achtung Baby's ironic astringency was a successful reaction to Rattle and Hum's gauzy sincerity. |
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The book ends with an assault by the mob on Mr Chainmail's 12th-cent. castle, an ironic comment on the more visionary schemes to solve the troubles of the age of reform. |
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It's ironic that a motion picture designed as mainstream, commercial entertainment in France will be viewed as an art house film during its American run. |
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But Gray's treatment of these memorials is highly ironic, for he lets us see that in them the dead consign their fates in written form to non-readers. |
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How ironic it was, my father said, that as a young man he dreamed that his baby son would grow up to be a famous surgeon and play rugger for Scotland. |
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Movies are a mode whose elastic form, by turns comic, ironic, and parodic, can tolerate heteroglossia that would wreck more narrowly defined forms. |
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This is all the more ironic considering the months of rigorous structuring, arranging and rehearsing that such tuneage must go under before being anywhere near presentable. |
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Bernie is the quintessential ironic protagonist, the luckless man. |
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In eastern Europe there is an ironic return to pandering after western Europe, as Classicism once affected the formal precepts of French academic style. |
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It is supremely ironic that the Ninth Circuit is the court of appeals that is taking the Supreme Court's new Commerce Clause jurisprudence the most seriously. |
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Which is ironic because I've just spent the last hour composing a letter. |
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How ironic that the Hermit Kingdom is taking the blame for our first real look inside a clique that not even Vice dares penetrate. |
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How ironic that we train our children first to be good, social human beings, only to later demand that they act like acquisitive, productivist, hardhearted machines. |
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It seems cruelly ironic that the sculptor, once ridiculed for the mirrors' construction, should not, until now, have received credit for their design. |
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The text is laced with an ironic cadence of the oral tradition. |
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Warhol and Lichtenstein riffed on product logos and comic books because it was ironic. |
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Needlepoint upholstery and rag rugs are hardly the expected stuff in SoHo galleries, especially when they serve neither ironic nor socially critical purposes. |
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The awkward divergence from fashion is so compellingly wrong that it appears cool in the most ironic, hipster kind of way. |
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It is ironic that these recent degradations of traditional citizenry have followed a period of 50 years unparalleled advance in the quality of material life. |
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The most ironic thing about irony is how many people just don't get it. |
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The racist suspicions of the French toward Mediterraneans underlay the eventual ironic triumph of Italian accordion music as the defining Parisian sound of hal musette. |
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It's ironic that computers break down so often, since they're meant to save people time. |
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It is not ironic or post-ironic, merely manufactured and synthetic. |
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His voice is mildly nasal, mildly ironic, and in general, mild. |
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And so image-sensitive liberal, urbane, ironic culturati are going to want to prove their complex open-heartedness by indifferently swooning over her book. |
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Some are witty, some impressively moving, some sententious, but the lack of dramatic context normally prevents evaluation of serious or ironic intent. |
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There's nothing even vaguely satirical or ironic about this story. |
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That was 1990, and the friend and his friends were witty and sparkly, and totally convinced me that Aucklanders were smart and sophisticated and ironic beyond my ken. |
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It's ironic, people use sunbeds because they think they'll look better, and yet they will probably end up looking old prematurely and possibly getting skin cancer. |
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It was a head-and-shoulders caricature of Chamberlain looking bloated, ugly and malevolent, wearing a lurid orange tent-like dress patterned in ironic little hearts. |
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Perhaps the most ironic aspect of the whole thing is that these are the first people to wrap themselves in the flag and pat themselves on the back for their patriotism. |
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It is ironic that the sun, long regarded as a source of health and vitality, is now depicted as a mortal danger to the unsuspecting British public. |
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It is ironic that the ideas of microcredit originated in the third world. |
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In an ironic twist, English supporters are now more likely to be the victims than the perpetrators of hooliganism. |
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The rules also state the actors take their characters seriously enough and forgo the ironic winks that provide a safety net for their ego, but can pop the bubble of the plot. |
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Monsieur Salles suavely smiled in an expression of ironic skepticism. |
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The Foes were Dissenters, Protestants who did not belong to the Anglican Church, and Daniel's ironic attack on the church landed him a three-day stretch in the pillory. |
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In one ironic scene, Harry encounters Dan, a language poet and a former rival, in the mullet. |
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Levy's wry sort of humour and the ironic use of an English woman's perspective to describe the problems confronted by the immigrants is both clever and sensitive. |
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This is somewhat ironic, given that the DOT now prefers metal neutral joint ventures as a mechanism to lower fares. |
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The ironic twist is that he recently admitted to a possible onset of coulrophobia. |
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The movie was so craptacular that it generated legions of ironic fans who watched it over and over solely to mock it mercilessly. |
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Modern historians are unsure if that was meant to be an ironic punishment for the soldiers' mutiny or due to Caligula's derangement. |
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Counter intentional or ironic error is a further example of the delinking of intentional thought processes and behavior. |
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Pitt's entry into parliament is somewhat ironic as he later railed against the very same pocket and rotten boroughs that had given him his seat. |
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It is somewhat ironic that this event was not instigated by the elected representatives of the realm. |
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Zelman is undecided as to whether More was being ironic in his book or was genuinely advocating a police state. |
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His pieces are often ironic and cynical, especially regarding love and human motives. |
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It is ironic that the robber's car crashed into a police station. |
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Popular literature also drew on themes of romance, but with ironic, satiric or burlesque intent. |
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His style became less ironic, and the poems were no longer populated by multiple characters in dialogue. |
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In these works, Voltaire's ironic style, free of exaggeration, is apparent, particularly the restraint and simplicity of the verbal treatment. |
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In an ironic development, wild elms have spread and taken over the grounds of the abandoned Greek royal summer palace at Tatoi in Attica. |
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Margaret Atwood's 2005 novella The Penelopiad is an ironic rewriting of The Odyssey from Penelope's perspective. |
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I'd always wanted to be a good drummer and it's just ironic that I've turned out to be a bass player. |
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He was often mocked for what were seen as sycophantic odes to the king, most notably in Byron's long ironic dedication of Don Juan to Southey. |
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Marx was later to incorporate this comically ironic characterisation of Louis Bonaparte's coup into his essay about the coup. |
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To avoid direct retribution from censors, writers often hid criticism in obscure articles or expressed it in ironic terms. |
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In yet another ironic twist in a story richly endowed with such warps, the Tsar's telegram crossed one despatched in the other direction. |
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Great news for both a Capella fans and ironic a Capella fans. |
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It is deeply ironic that hi-tech medicine should have evolved a therapeutic method that evokes anthropophagic fantasies in its patients. |
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Yet these works, with their calm, almost Apollonian appearance, do not, in fact, lack playfulness or ironic lightness. |
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There is an ironic twist to the imperialising of British popular culture not brought out by Mackenzie. |
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In a week when arthouse films came to town in the guise of Cyprus Film Days, it's ironic that the artiest one of all is showing at the multiplex. |
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In its peculiar ironic twist, this divorcement, we soon learn, involves an intriguing deconstructive impact avant la lettre. |
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It is a long journey that comes full circle back in alpine fields with ironic surprise. |
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It's ironic that when the fixtures were arranged, Northampton had a series of double-headers when we had single games. |
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How ironic to uncage the new millennium and find 19th-century Darwinism at a new apex. |
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It would also rectify an ironic, and tragic, distortion of history. |
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In an ironic way, nature balances the situation when the thing obsessed turns on and bites the obsessor. |
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This Bobola's miracle has been demonstrated by the Bolshevists in an ironic way. |
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Grant might have had a faint, mournful, ironic chuckle over this. |
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But where he does not blend irony with sincerity, he can be wholly and overweeningly ironic. |
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Her dances were filled with invention, wit, and vitality and were by turn sardonic, ironic, and thought-provoking. |
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How ironic that it might just turn out that our mothers are the real go-getters. |
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In another ironic twist, I'd actually been Kate's penfriend when I was a teenager. |
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The ironic thing is that in training you wouldn't give tuppence for Greenie, but on match days he was electric. |
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The publication of Requiem was not just sad, it was heavily ironic. |
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It's ironic that the CIA trained these fierce mujahedin warriors. |
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Which is ironic because it's totally self-serve, so even looking at credit unions that are hanging their hat on service as a distinguisher, even that definition is changing. |
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Like a good phenomenologist, he allows Heidegger to show himself as ironic, but he does this in a text where phenomenology itself is called into question. |
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What perhaps is ironic is that does not allow civilian skydivers. |
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It is only about two-thirds as long as Dryden's version, chiefly because Johnson reduces Juvenal's satirical illustrations to terse, ironic apophthegms. |
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Despite this failure to truly overcome racial boundaries, the film succeeds within its ability to provide a tragically ironic commentary on its inability to miscegenate. |
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Here is why, for Frye, all literature, even the most wretchedly tragic, the most cynically satirical, and the most alienatingly ironic, can teach us about desire. |
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A major debate concerns whether the character of Price is meant to be ironic, a parody of the wholesome heroines that were so popular in Regency novels. |
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Kogals, surfers, and other subcultural types created a space for women to play with a new aesthetic of the noncute or the cute infused with an ironic twist. |
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Halperin cautioned that Austen often satirised popular sentimental romantic fiction in her letters, and some of the statements about Lefroy may have been ironic. |
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In Comus, Milton may make ironic use of the Caroline court masque by elevating notions of purity and virtue over the conventions of court revelry and superstition. |
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Indeed, one of the main characteristics of the practice of study of Weltliteratur is its ironic dependence on an often unquestioned monolingualism. |
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He uses the tales and descriptions of its characters to paint an ironic and critical portrait of English society at the time, and particularly of the Church. |
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It is ironic that the usual criticism regarded as damning Lawrence is precisely that he is heavyhanded, that he labours the point, that he is overinsistent. |
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Socrates is the archetypal high master of subtle, ironic anacrisis. |
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But she gets her revenge here in a gleefully ironic song that skewers a Madness-style piano lick to a critique of modern females and the value judgments they face. |
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The story makes no value judgment as to whether Scully's words are economically sound or tend to bankrupt the listener, which seems kind of ironic considering the source. |
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In this sentence, the use of bent on self-improvement develops an ironic intention because of the semantic prosodic clash between bent on and self-improvement. |
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Between starring in its own hiply ironic television show and suddenly becoming the darling of East Coast news media, Portland is extremely hot these days. |
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In response to Geduld's comment, I would submit that although Enrico's film lacks Bierce's ironic tone, it conveys his dramatic irony with signal success. |
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But Nomura's recommendations was ironic in the extreme, essentially advising clients to substitute an admitted money launderer for an accused money launderer. |
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It is ironic that they are so very fearful of a Zimbabwe-style landgrab since many of their ancestors were not adverse to grabbing a bit of land themselves. |
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