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The phrase was used by the Nazis purposefully so that the people coming there would think that it was a work camp and that there was a possibility that they would someday be released if they were cooperative and worked. There were thousands and thousands of Jews arriving each and every day. There were not enough German guards to contain them if they decided to riot and overthrow the Germans. So the phrase was used as a purposeful deception - and, unfortunately, it worked. The phrase is tragically ironic in that Nazi scientists planned out the diets of the prisoners at camps like Auschwitz. The prisoners were given just below the amount required to survive. As they worked, they were using these calories. As long as the prisoners worked, they were dying a death of slow starvation. The only liberty planned for the prisoners was death, and the work done at Auschwitz was the easiest way for the Nazis to reach that goal.
Crushed to death under a wagon. It's a bit ironic in the Alanis Morissette kind of way.
It's ironic that 2 days after elie left the camp the Russians liberated everyone who stayed behind.
It is ironic that Benedict Arnold escaped on the HMS Vulture because Arnold had been a general in the Continental Army fighting against the British, and the Vulture was a British ship. To escape on an enemy ship contradicted his previous allegiance and actions in the war, making it ironic.
The attitude that the old man has toward death is ironic for a couple of reasons. One of these ironies is that the man wishes he had more time in his life.
WIlson is allied with Russia and then talks bad about them
In "The Pardoner's Tale" the old man's attitude toward death is said to be ironic. The irony is that he is cheerful toward the idea of death, which is the opposite of what one would expect.
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What is so ironic is that Anne's dad was actually the prison guard, the person who abused the inmates and in the end, Gabriella's dad turns out to be one of those prisoners. The most ironic part was Anne's dad, the abuser, had more scars than Gabriella's father.
controlling idea topic ironic wich one is correct
Tone is the attitude that the narrator gives off. Some examples are: sarcastic, serious, ironic, objective, and humorous.
The prisoners in the book "Night" react to the threat of death from the air raid with apathy and indifference, which is ironic because they have already experienced so much suffering and hardship. This shows the dehumanizing effect of their experiences in the concentration camps, where death has become a normalized part of their existence.
The writer's attitude toward the material and/or readers. Tone may be playful, formal, intimate, angry, serious, ironic, outraged, baffled, tender, serene, depressed, etc.
No (that was ironic).
The writer's attitude toward the material and/or readers. Tone may be playful, formal, intimate, angry, serious, ironic, outraged, baffled, tender, serene, depressed, etc.
The phrase was used by the Nazis purposefully so that the people coming there would think that it was a work camp and that there was a possibility that they would someday be released if they were cooperative and worked. There were thousands and thousands of Jews arriving each and every day. There were not enough German guards to contain them if they decided to riot and overthrow the Germans. So the phrase was used as a purposeful deception - and, unfortunately, it worked. The phrase is tragically ironic in that Nazi scientists planned out the diets of the prisoners at camps like Auschwitz. The prisoners were given just below the amount required to survive. As they worked, they were using these calories. As long as the prisoners worked, they were dying a death of slow starvation. The only liberty planned for the prisoners was death, and the work done at Auschwitz was the easiest way for the Nazis to reach that goal.