The irony is that the most compelling arguments for fiscal freedom come not from Nationalists but from Unionists. |
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It is an irony lost on nobody that men draped in the English flag proclaiming unmatchable patriotism are the ones who disgrace this country. |
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It is worth interrupting the chronicle to draw attention to a hitherto unnoted irony in a political career in which ironies instructively abound. |
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The unobtrusive dialect and horrifying irony here make this one of Nelson's best lyrics. |
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The fact that Griffin's pranks occur during Whit Monday adds a humorous irony to a day of celebration and gaiety. |
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The irony of it being, that he gave everything up for her and became so unrecognizable to her, that she no longer loved him. |
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The music's lyricism, irony, sarcasm, and bittersweet triumph find the composer writing at white heat. |
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It was an irony not unregarded by the devil's advocates charged with disproving Joan's qualifications for sanctity. |
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Both games are full of nasty, sadistic violence, leavened just enough by irony and black humor to be tolerable. |
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The real irony is that Gone With the Wind tells not a great love story as much as a great unrequited love story. |
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The irony for nationalists is that the nation state is less able to deliver than ever. |
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They are bounteously gifted filmmakers, but sometimes you just want them to lay off the irony and climb down here with the groundlings. |
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The real irony of the situation at Barlinnie is that untried, unconvicted prisoners face the worst conditions. |
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The irony is that his deal with Lateline was the sort of untrustworthy action that he spends time in his diaries attacking the media for. |
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The perception of irony reveals the gap between narrative memory and linear reading. |
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The results are irony and sarcasm, and those are two things I try to avoid. |
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His behaviour is a perfect expression of courtesy and good feeling with a spice of irony in it. |
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But the jokes, slang and heavy irony that make up the established banter of the building trade could be heading for extinction. |
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Anakin was a farce and the script was awful, but somehow the lack of irony was refreshing in this day and age. |
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The second, appended to the first half with humorous irony, was apparently intended to mean what it sounded like. |
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With deliberate irony, they also echo corporate efforts at conveying information efficiently. |
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They do it very quickly, using irony, saying the opposite of what they mean, and using extreme language. |
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But perhaps the gods of irony thought that this just made things all the more ironic. |
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Learn how to use verbal irony by crafting dialogue that could have multiple meanings. |
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It is their very irony that will appeal to precisely the people whose passions they parody. |
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It was the mischievous irony of historical proportions and not the accumulated wisdom of Sovietologists that celebrated its triumph. |
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Like her mother, Cassie bruised easily, and in the irony of being a cutter she missed her scars. |
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The irony here is that this series achieves a high degree of realism when it deals with medical and surgical emergencies. |
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The irony is that a reality television programme made headlines for becoming just a little too real, a little too authentic. |
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He arranges a side-by-side comparison of Oedipus' irony and pathos with the wildness of his passion. |
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We are a straightforward and self-righteous people, so we are rather good at viciousness, but lacking in irony. |
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When the irony comes built-in like that you realize that the opposition isn't even trying. |
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Understated literary allusions and layers of irony give Victorian attitudes a sly contemporary look. |
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It works successfully for both teenage audiences, with whom it resonates, and older viewers, who grasp the irony. |
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Hip, youthful irony pervades Zhao Bandi's self-portrait vignettes with his Baby Panda doll. |
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That the band was brought down by a drunk driver fuels the irony and spits in the face of what Compromise stood for. |
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But then, overdosing on received wisdom and political correctness does tend to result in irony deficiency. |
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What vivifies these elements, however, is the central operation of a pervasive and fundamental irony. |
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Two things are worth noting, apart from the obvious one that this man believes without any irony that the cure for unbelief is exorcism. |
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But did he know he would use irony to such clever effect even a moment before he began doing so? |
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We retreat into our irony cages when we feel threatened by our difference from other people. |
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That said, it was well researched and balanced with just enough savage irony to break the gravity with levity. |
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That's the ultimate irony for people who want to adopt a non-theistic view of the origin of life. |
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In her experiment, psychologist Penny Pexman of the University of Calgary found that children as young as five were able to detect verbal irony. |
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The irony is that Robben was not allowed to complete the match, nor even take much part in the second half. |
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That Hume should suffer the agony of defeat by those he did so much to habilitate would be a cruel final irony. |
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There is some irony in the notion that nudists on a public beach do not want to have their privacy invaded. |
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Of course, the killer irony is that smaller cars are better than big ones for any number of reasons. |
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The relative calm in the region was an irony not lost on some newspaper commentators. |
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Combining foxy irony with withering disdain, McDiarmid presents us with the tragedy of a man for whom the mask has become the face. |
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The fitting irony is that he is condemned by the Klan, the very organization whose principles he advocates. |
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Over a quarter of the city was obliterated, with a dreadful irony removing it from the top of the list of A-bomb targets. |
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For those who have experienced officialdom, and for that matter officiousness, there are levels of irony in that poster. |
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With such scathing one-liners Steers gives his film a hard carapace of irony. |
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To allude to this lethal confrontation, this terminal comedy of errors, Heine employs the language of irony and inversion. |
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From pop art to modern irony, this type of comic has been sampled everywhere. |
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Be careful with irony or sarcasm, especially if you are emailing someone abroad. |
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In perfect irony, one of them was seen pasting posters on the pedestal of the Kamaraj statue to publicise an agitation in the city on Tuesday. |
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The irony has often been that charges were based on hearsay and rumour rather than on proper research and verification. |
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Its transformation seems more catachresis than irony, more a twisted similarity than an inversion or negation. |
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In this way, he is a documentarian-poet, cataloguing the trials of his tribe with a sense of humour, irony, and sincerity. |
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In drama, such oblique or hidden cataphoric pointers to what is yet to come are usually called dramatic irony. |
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The irony is that visitors are often struck by how fully integrated Cuban society appears to be. |
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There are plenty of interesting things to say about these pitch contours, but irony and sarcasm are not an essential part of the discussion. |
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The irony of signs that have come to signify difference is that they are at once reductive, yet simultaneously contextual. |
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In all forms of popular media, every new idea is strip-mined for irony as soon as it's out of the box. |
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Edgar Allen Poe has a very unique style of writing in many ways. Poe tends to write his stories emphasizing dramatic irony and verbal irony |
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Yet she also conveys the resilience and irony of a woman forced by crisis into a redefinition of self. |
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His irony, by contrast, is too subtle to stand up to the grimness of much of his subject matter. |
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Shiny, colourful, mass-produced materials and images abound, as well as irony, wordplay and visual jokes. |
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The fourth chapter describes the relations between irony and intertextuality. |
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The great irony of this whole situation is that history is repeating itself in a big way. |
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Ignoring the irony of my thought, I stripped down to my chemise and sat in bed for hours, trying to think of what was to become of all this. |
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Despite this, there are times when rays of golden pop sunshine fall upon the album and make me question how bittersweet the irony is. |
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No metropolitian restaurant has put prawn cocktail and chicken Kiev on the menu for years, except in a spirit of irony. |
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But Far from Heaven is a film of great emotional resonance precisely because it hasn't a trace of irony or knowingness. |
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That one arm of a supposedly free press would do this to another is irony indeed. |
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The films seem refreshingly free from worthiness, irony, and political correctness, and do not attempt to work on more than one level. |
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Such wryness and wit are generously on hand in Hamilton's prints, as is a pervasive irony. |
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It is well known that speakers rely on prosodic and gestural features at the time of producing and understanding verbal irony. |
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They cry out in a familiar musical language of liberation, but the politics are drenched with irony. |
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Please spare us any more of your bad manners, chutzpah, irony and hypocrisy! |
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The ridiculous metal guitars were parodied hilariously by worthy MIDI keyboards, but here they are reveled in, with no irony intended. |
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That the symbol of freedom was both a distant star and a symbol of the African communal past is no small irony. |
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The question of verbal irony is of expanding relevance to a range of fields of cultural information and inquiry. |
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He wanted people who could pick up on irony, nuance and jargon, and he also wanted the technologists to hurry up. |
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The irony is that the official programme is not particularly elitist, either in terms of classical art forms or cutting-edge postmodernism. |
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Stripping in the new burlesque goes only as far as pasties and G-strings, not so much in the interests of taste as in the interests of irony. |
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It's the irony of the situation today that those who claim to be Indian patriots supported British rule. |
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Amidst all this scandal and intrigue, these monumental moments of dramatic irony and double-dealing, all our hero can do is chatter. |
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It is a grim irony lost on them, for which they will pay dearly in elections to come. |
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The irony here though is that Techdirt, having preached against such paywalls, goes and sets one up itself! |
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Some films answer this question by poeticizing realism, through irony and humaneness, or by just giving up believability. |
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The duo display a likable rapport and a healthy sense of irony, and their show is punctuated by flashes of invigorating idiocy. |
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Their problem is to understand when people talk in indirect speech and use irony, idioms and metaphors because they take each sentence literally. |
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But this is a highly agreeable book, saved by Shelby Hearon's command of irony and idiom from the cliches of sentimental romance. |
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A fair portion of contemporary poetry over-relies on self-reflexive irony, tonal detachment, and an often irritating allusive erudition. |
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But, as usual, Jack displayed the irony of his many advanced education degrees and illiterately misread the map. |
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There was irony in the fact that the only player from the area immediately south of the Zambesi had played for England. |
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This is an irony which shames us in the presence of Allah, the Almighty and most worthy of praise. |
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But surely there's an irony to the April meet-up being on the First Seder Night of Pesach. |
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It is an impassive reversal of the expected hospital-drama roles to which the movie attaches no overt irony. |
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I'm hardly an authority on saints, or irony, but am I right in thinking that, before he got religion, St. Andrew was a Middle Eastern fisherman? |
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Those who don't know him better could be forgiven for missing the irony in that expression. |
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Everyone recognized the irony when in 1904 Trinity federated with its former nemesis. |
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But by this point, many a reader, having long since succumbed to compassion fatigue, will suffer from irony fatigue as well. |
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When Kim and I fought, I would inevitably retreat into the safety of my irony cage. |
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The irony is that in the subsequent stories, so many are living in darkness, both figurative and literal. |
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I think that Greek Tragedy and the Platonic dialogues are positively riddled with irony. |
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In the past fifteen years, her work has taken a distinct turn towards playful irony and exuberant narration. |
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John F. Kennedy, with his cool detachment, humor and irony, was the supreme example. |
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The irony is made only more perfect by the absolute lack thereof on the site itself. |
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Yet, behind the irony in the final rhythmic incantation, we read an emptiness that is neither spiritual sustenance nor love. |
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The irony is that I am willing to stand up and say that and take a good amount of criticism for it. |
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Of course, the irony was all the sharper because these events had taken place not simply in God's country, but at summer camp. |
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Unlike Rorty's ironist, however, Agee's irony becomes a rhetorical tactic for sparking social consciousness. |
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In fact, isn't the irony of this that the cult of life is elevating its gloriole in a society whose cultural output makes a fetish of death? |
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No one does this properly anymore, at least not without some overbearing sense of irony. |
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It would be a delicious irony if these actions now deem him to be unfit to sit on the council. |
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In a stroke of delicious irony, their transformative record is merely alright. |
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The Senate describes itself, without apparent irony or hint of self-awareness, as the world's greatest deliberative body. |
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This suggests that Dada artists are exempt from the general rule that ironists are the biggest victims of their own irony. |
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It is an unpleasant irony that this lingering antagonism finds its focus in hunting rather than shooting. |
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However, there is an irony in the fact that if the plan to off-load the pro teams is successful they again will need a chief executive. |
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The irony is that until the book, Keane rarely courted publicity and was famed for valuing his privacy. |
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Thompson retains the lines but abandons their judicial context, thus depriving the play of its retrospective irony. |
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The irony of Kinsey's character is that he isn't given to temptation in the usual sense. |
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With cruel irony, as livelihoods became increasingly precarious, population totals soared. |
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But not overly strong on our sense of irony, if the rhetorical bombast of this article is anything to go by. |
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The irony here, I always thought, was that it was the reintroduction of debatable metaphysics that gave analytic philosophy its power. |
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Such irony that the nation leading the world into the Information Age has an electoral system that is so antiquated. |
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And there is great irony in a man obviously trying to lie his way out of this while pretending to be a man of God. |
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The irony of inviting an Aboriginal artist to create a work for a rifle range was not lost on Andrew. |
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You find, if you change a direction, you get an opposition and an apposition, which creates an irony, which creates a metaphor. |
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My reply at the time was that I was no longer entirely sure where irony ended, and where sincere enjoyment and appreciation of the event began. |
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Did anyone you researched think of themselves not as rogue scientists but as outsider artists, with a sheen of irony around their projects? |
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The irony is that we were pre-boarding with an 8-month-old baby, and they moved us to let another couple sit together. |
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Moreover, his fascination with B-movies, science fiction and the rest of pop culture was self-conscious but not qualified by archness or irony. |
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Yet this definition fails to explain instances of litotes, or understatement, which is often classified as a kind of irony. |
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The love of irony, of contradiction and the strange, founds and haunts modern literature, beginning with the German Romantics. |
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They considered dramatic monologue, dramatic irony, persona as mask, and so on. |
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He was sharply perceptive and had an earthy, sly humour which put an edge on his nice irony. |
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The sad irony is that, so long as he arrogated the country's bear-hunting rights largely to himself, the bear population flourished. |
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There is a place for irony on TV, and even for snidey non-comics posing as gagsters. |
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The irony of these remarks can scarcely have been lost on the assembled senators. |
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The irony is that a lurch to the left might actually prolong the inevitable fall of this medieval institution. |
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The irony here of course is that the funkadelic Cali-flava'd beats aren't that hardcore. |
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The colossal irony is that a madman who rescued her from her folly was the same madman who later killed her. |
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You can chew on the irony of icon-maker MTV presenting this notion when you're averting your eyes during the extended surgery scenes. |
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His wit, sarcasm, and sense of irony are not always easy to distinguish from where he is sincere. |
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There are jokes and smatterings of sarcasm and irony in Register stories but these aren't for you. |
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We can only presume that the index does not account for such complex concepts as sarcasm and irony. |
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The irony is that most consumers are happy to see their names included on mailing lists. |
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The same bored target market that reduced irony to a one-liner gave the movie 'cultural icon' status. |
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Penrose veers into irony in the lengths to which he goes to point out where his ideas deviate from the mainstream. |
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The irony is that when we are most full of ourselves is when we are least aware of how full of ourselves we are. |
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Occasionally, satire or irony can illuminate a subject in a clever or comic way without leaving you chortling uncontrollably. |
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Some pointed out the film's emotional power, others its use of irony and satire to criticize fascism. |
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Another related discursive tendency is the use of satiric irony, especially sarcasm. |
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His movies are the works of a brilliant, cynical satirist whose artistic downfall was an unceasing irony. |
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The ending is satisfyingly nihilistic, albeit laden down with rather heavy-handed irony. |
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The latest record by the David Lowery-led Cracker adds fuel to the argument that Americans don't understand irony. |
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The hidden irony is that fondue is as integral to Swiss cuisine as, say, mince and tatties are to ours. |
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The irony was that I was drinking lager rather than Scotch in an attempt to avoid crapulence. |
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They are unelectable malcontents who recognize no irony in their complaints and won't take responsibility for the mess they have conjured. |
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For someone who has always been a fan of high alpine meadows, it seemed a cruel irony to be dragged from sleep by a cowbell. |
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Arabian Jazz is replete with humorous instances of recontextualized cultural inheritance, cultural teases, and trickster-like irony. |
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Duke's ability to charm us really comes from the single irony he generates. |
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Jeffrey's memoir is, in the main, a work of numbing tedium, self-indulgent and lacking any sense of irony. |
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Psychological realism is therefore heightened at the expense of tragic irony. |
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A palpable sense of irony, derived from Greek tragedy, embeds itself in the noirish landscape. |
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The irony I found was that he is perfectly at home talking on the telephone or sending text messages. |
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He, more than anyone, appreciated the irony of what was going on elsewhere last week. |
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And the handkerchief becomes transformed again, by tragic irony, into a visual argument for Desdemona's adultery. |
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I think it would make for a gentle irony if the two of them were to covet the two top jobs at the one time. |
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Although both verbal and situational irony was already prominent by the time of Socrates, neither kind was called irony for a long time. |
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Earlier this year he spoke of the irony of having so many women interested in him when he is marooned on the island. |
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There is an irony in comparing how the law is moving in relation to married and unmarried couples on this issue. |
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I find a certain irony in seeing a parent drive their kid door to door to collect pledges for a walkathon. |
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Schlegel's Romantic irony was a reaction to the systematic thought of Kant. |
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Young people of my generation had no time for Larkin's irony and simply dismissed traditional sexual morality as a clutter of meaningless taboos. |
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There is also an example of dramatic irony when Huck tells of the drunk horseman at the circus. |
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The irony is that if there is a threat to Australia, it will most likely come from our region. |
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It is an innocent story, free of cynicism or irony or any trace of mean-spiritedness. |
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Situational irony is not communicated, but is experienced in the course of one's life. |
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Reader-directed irony, that by now classical stylistic device of postmodern literature, pervades the ancient play. |
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In my experience, it is possible to find situational irony all around us with a bit of practice. |
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I was teaching a basic college writing course one summer at the local community college and I wanted to explain irony as a literary device. |
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With a less deft script, this could have been a thuddingly dull motion picture, but Steers finds the right balance between irony and pathos. |
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Lighting up showed defiance, depression, anti-social or self-destructive behaviour, humour and, in at least one case, great irony. |
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He is about 41, with iron grey hair, round glasses, and a faint air of irony. |
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The irony is that British submarines did not really have the potential to sink battleships as their armour was simply too great. |
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A realist third-person narrative, its critical irony comes through in the novel's ambiguous, multivalent ending. |
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He responds to mass media images and topical subjects without the irony that characterizes much postmodern mainstream art. |
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He says it would be the ultimate irony if the home of a man devoted to conserving York were to be pulled down. |
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At times the attempt to draw literal, historical analogies does violence to Stevensian irony. |
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The fact that both bands performed in Exploding Plastic Inevitable at the Trip club in Los Angeles is a great Warholian irony. |
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Wit, irony and lightness were always balanced, for Smith, by genuine affection and warmth. |
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Given the Forum's multicultural pretensions, it is a cruel irony that the Tibetan monks were swiftly banished from the beanfeast. |
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You have to wonder about the horrific irony of the death merchant confronting the loss of his own son. |
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The sad irony of it all is that God's infinite mercifulness extends to the nether limits where our present breed of politicians abound. |
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Today, more than 25 years later and with his sensational trial underway, it is heavy with irony. |
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The irony is that they believed they had couched their decision in language no-one would find offensive. |
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The irony was wasted on the Americans as they swarmed down the crumbling alleys. |
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Delight in the boy can only be sharpened by the pathos and irony of his condition of becomingness. |
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And I laughed and guffawed at the irony of it, and even Verge did let forth a merry mirth-filled giggle. |
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The greatest irony of this case was that his wife was also a patient, presenting with insomnia due to shift work as a nurse. |
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In a case of savage irony, Yost ended up supervising the termination of many of the engineers he helped to hire. |
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In a twist of almost malicious irony, his home was the closest they had to neutral ground. |
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To add irony to injury, his reselection was itself a result of an injury to the captain Jason Robinson. |
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The irony was that this glorification of the individual was coterminous with its complete obliteration. |
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Banjos, pedal steel and harmonicas lock into a lazy-afternoon groove without an ounce of irony to hide behind. |
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And they mewl and cry, their symphony invested with irony, which I merely attribute to a vein in the quartz. |
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He lets out a belly laugh, knowing that I've caught the dripping irony in his voice. |
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There's plenty of irony in seeing one monopoly accuse another monopoly of restricting users' choices. |
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A funny bit of irony resulted from the mid-air debate that was sparked by the sight of my cropped hair. |
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The irony is that the German breweries rendered idle by Pasteur's strategy were adapted to manufacture acetone for cordite production. |
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The irony was that Airdrie emerged from the match with one of their best results after one of their poorest performances. |
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The irony of the growing shortage is that in responding to it, China could soon find itself with too much capacity. |
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But perhaps the most bitter and disturbing irony is that the best surf tends to arrive during the winter. |
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Isn't there also an irony in one so avowedly anti-Establishment revelling in the pronouncement of a bewigged judge? |
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Indeed, there is not only irony but danger in offering such a public jeremiad against jeremiads. |
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When he was still in his 20s, a steady descent into corpulence, shiftlessness and defensive irony began. |
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The irony of that situation was that Stalin judged Hitler to be more rational than in fact he was. |
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And the irony is that I've just this minute been given a free membership to the local Holmes gym from my work. |
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Heavy irony underlines her declaration that she had always wanted to be in the movies and longed to be discovered, like Marilyn Monroe. |
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In this instance, the irony is only comprehensible when it is perceived as a contemptuous echoic interpretation of our God's words. |
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The irony is that our efforts at self preservation and self protection so often cause precisely what we're seeking to hold at bay. |
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I enjoyed your piece, Tom, I like contradictions, irony, humour and absurdities. |
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The woman's response in verses 11 and 12 is replete with Johannine double-entendre, irony and misunderstanding. |
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Irony, and metaphor as a form of irony, is a way to understand how the English language is used. |
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The triumphant success of this gangster paradigm lies in the script's wit and macabre irony. |
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The great irony of communism is that its most devoted adherents were not those at the top who brought it into being. |
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The irony of a French initiative intended to depathologize transsexuality was forgotten in the fervor to relay the announcement. |
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Behind these violent and ugly displays of rank bullying lies a profound irony. |
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This is an increasingly complicated and vital issue, but when handled with such shrillness and heavy-handed irony, the message is soon lost. |
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Alex stood for a second and realized the irony that her CD shuffler chose this song first. |
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His merciless scorn, his blistering sarcasm, his rapier-like thrusts of irony must have made many an opponent squirm. |
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The irony is that Midland along with its twin city, Odessa, is one of the most stratified and narrow places in the country. |
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But there's an irony and self-awareness at work in some of these books, hiding inside a blaze of pink. |
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In a strange twist of irony, this very narrowing down of themes may result in a wider audience. |
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Humour and melancholy, sincerity and irony are as balanced as a health freak's diet. |
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However, it soon dawned on me that these people were actually real activists, and their chants were not a form of deliberate irony. |
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It was no irony that even as the pamphlets were being distributed, Congressmen were on the verge of coming to blows. |
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Davis never failed to draw irony from his uncanny ability to find the right things at the right time. |
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The servants in Middleton's play represent an underclass that lives and thrives by irony, especially the irony of noble birth. |
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I remembered, with a sense of irony, the distaste I had had for such underhanded methods. |
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A tale of two cities, heavy with irony and laden with symbolism, was played out over the summer. |
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I suppose that there are people who could fail to notice when I'm deploying irony, exaggerating for humorous effect or just burbling. |
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It involved the use of that very English form of expression known as irony. |
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Their happy laughter rang down the tunnel as they appreciated the irony, or failing that, the slapstick. |
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As one expects of Elton, it's all done with slapstick humour, parody, irony and lots of absurd action. |
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There's a certain grim irony here from comments made at the 2001 shareholders meeting to consider the domicile shift. |
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By this point in the movie, Banek can only laugh with caustic irony at this diatribe. |
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Prague Fatale is authentic because Kerr can muffle the horror of this epoch in dramatic irony but he can also shout it out loud. |
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Still, there is an irony to it that may appeal to Boris's waggish nature. |
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In the film, Macy's character was totally enclosed in the irony and yet we could identify with his desperate puniness without hoping for him to get away with his crime. |
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So much so, dancers of other forms like Orissi in east, Sanjukta Panigrahi and Sonal Mansingh, expressed desire to serve as devadasis in temples, an irony lost on all. |
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The irony is that he would have been two strokes better off had he not been penalised for grounding his club in a bunker during Thursday's first round. |
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It's nice to be able to sincerely gush, surrounded by other sincere gushers, about love and friendship and a sacred relationship, and know that you are in an irony free zone. |
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The author evinces not the slightest irony about the fact that his own list would qualify, given his definition, as an exercise in fundamentalism. |
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In recent years literature has seen a profusion of irony and exotica, as if writers are too exhausted to keep up the fight, and instead hope to distract us. |
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The difference is that in Socratic and dramatic irony this is intentional whereas in situational irony this may also be hidden, implied or unspecified. |
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A combination of both verbal and situational irony in literary texts is thus not unusual, as they often work together in order to increase the ironic effect. |
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When the characters as ironic vehicles are removed from a general dramatic situation, the irony becomes a situational one and is then classified as general situational irony. |
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Postmodernism, with its deconstruction and defamiliarization, its irony and black humour, pastiche and intertextuality, was like a secret language for the kids on the block. |
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Edgar Allan Poe's classic short story, "The Cask of Amontillado," is loaded with irony, and there are several excellent examples of verbal irony to be found. |
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Counterfactual verbal irony, in which the literal meaning of an utterance is directly opposite its intended meaning, is a figurative language form. |
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Three experiments assessed four variables that may affect verbal irony processing: people’s expectations of events, event outcome, evaluations of outcome, and shared common ground. |
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This study offers a pragmatic account of verbal irony, arguing that verbal irony can be best treated as a special type of conversational implicature. |
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It was a tragic irony that he made himself sick by worrying so much about his health. |
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Of course, the aesthetics on view here are all about comedy, and irony and poking fun and paradox. |
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With irony and wit he charmed a nation, but displayed a detachment that kept him aloof from the passions of his time. |
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Perhaps the greatest irony remains that civil rights titan Caesar Chavez was a lifelong opponent of illegal immigration. |
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Finally, the same irony that wandered the killing fields of the Sudan, like the ghost of murdered rationality, has returned to haunt the ruins of Iraq. |
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He uses various comic conventions such as satire, farce, absurdism, and irony to attack widely divergent cultural philosophies, politics, and ethics. |
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I make just about twice as much in this position than I would in a job where I did have to utilize the things I learned in school, which I think qualifies as true irony. |
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It is perhaps an unintended irony that on the same page that we find ads for cleaners, we find ads for the guys who will take you to the cleaners if you let them. |
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The irony is that, with his frightfully pukka delivery and actorish manner, Stephens's hero seems to be of an older stylistic vintage than anyone else on stage. |
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Not short of male admirers, she sees the irony of her situation. |
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Thus all the greater irony that Downton required another American import, Cora Grantham, in order to keep the estate running. |
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The grand irony in this, which was that he spent his own period of military service drinking and whoring around bars in Alabama, was rarely mentioned. |
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But Sciortino cut her teeth in that world of excess irony, cynicism, and posturing. |
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It was while standing in the early dawn at the opening ceremony for the recommissioned Matahina Dam on the Rangitikei River in 1998 that the irony first occurred to me. |
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The poem recounts, with heavy tones and little irony, the kitschy mock-trial proceedings, in which an audience of tourists deems Bishop guilty of witchery. |
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Often irony is the only redeeming quality of his serpentine sentences. |
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Humor has given way to humorlessness, sarcasm to sanctimony, irony to invective. |
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Even after these successive near misses, the irony mark remains an elusive beast. |
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It is safe to say that the creators and supporters of other irony and sarcasm marks were not amused. |
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The inability of Americans like Gene to get the joke makes it quite difficult for me to sell the line here in London that not all Yanks come without irony detectors. |
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These comments were not without irony considering that Quinn was remonstrating with Newry full back Michael Kelly moments before things kicked off. |
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It is impossible for a modern author to create the necessary tone for an epic without lapsing into irony, because the material conditions preclude the creation of new myths. |
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The return of the minor mode of the first aria at the conclusion provides dramatic resolution to the work where the poet's deceived heart is inflected with irony. |
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The irony is that the idealization of Earp as a good guy with a gun, an unswerving servant of law and order, is a myth. |
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Nor should the irony of this be overlooked, given Hanson's stridently self-righteous defense of free speech in the face of repressive political correctness. |
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And Philip Roth, equally unencumbered by irony, mourned Plimpton effusively in his novel Exit Ghost. |
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His gentle irony acts on her like Kinglake's spurs on jaded Eastern hirelings, and like the accounts of travelers past on our self-styled Anatolian riders. |
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Lacking any sense of irony, Eldridge made campaign-finance reform a signature plank. |
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There was a cruel irony in him being killed from above by an errant bomb dropped by an American B-1 bomber. |
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The irony did not escape one local, Laith Hathim, as he stood and watched the newly minted refugees make their way into Mosul. |
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