The irony in Winston's voluntary donation to Parsons is that Parson's is a devout supporter of the Party and the oppressive regime, even though he eventually gets arrested and punished by the Party. This action highlights the twisted loyalty and fear instilled by the Party, where even those who support it blindly can eventually fall victim to its unjust ways.
Winston's prophecy of Syme's imminent disappearance is ironic because Syme is eventually vaporized by the Party for his lack of conformity to their ideology, which is exactly what Winston had predicted. The irony lies in the fact that Winston, who himself is against the Party, unknowingly foresees the fate of someone who shares his rebellious mindset. It highlights the ruthless and unpredictable nature of the Party's control over its citizens.
No (that was ironic).
There are multiple standing on this: The Cafe itself is not the irony, but the irony is the two of them betraying each other. Or the more likely you are thinking of: The lines Winston thinks "under the spreading Chestnut tree/I sold you and you sold me" which is a line from a Glenn Miller song, however it has bastardized implications, making the thought ironic.
The tone was ironic
The Epigram is fairly ironic.
The tone of "Ironic" by Alanis Morissette is sarcastic and ironic. The song discusses situations that are presented as ironic but are actually just unfortunate or coincidental, playing on the idea of situational irony.
yes it is ironic
Tagalog Translation of IRONIC: pakutya
1. containing or exemplifying irony: an ironic novel; an ironic remark. 2. ironical. 3. coincidental; unexpected: It was ironic that I was seated next to my ex-husband at the dinner.
Another word for Ironic would be Coincidental.
There was an ironic twist in the story. Hope that helped?
what is ironic about the ending of act 111