Irony is all around us and at the heart of life itself. After all our efforts at self improvement, after all our excitement over life's highs and agony over its lows, we die. There is irony in that and irony in that it doesn't matter to most of us as we live our lives anyway. It's something we accept. By way of a definition, irony exists in the discrepancies between the definitions we assign to realities and the realities themselves which don't give a hoot one way or the other about our definitions.
A catchier version: Irony is the gap between our definitions and our realities, between our expectations and our outcomes, and between our plans and our fates.
No because an illustration for definition is not contradictory to was is expected.
No (that was ironic).
The basic definition of an ironic commentary is using words or phrases to convey something that is the opposite of the literal meaning. For example, if someone says they had a bad day, and your response is 'Sounds Awesome' that would be an ironic commentary. So, for a romance story you would write the opposite of what you thought the literal meaning was, usually this will be comical.
Literal language does not have a figurative meaning but instead sticks to the original definition of the word. It is not metaphorical or ironic in any sense of use.
The Epigram is fairly ironic.
The tone was 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
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.
what is ironic about the ending of act 111
Another word for Ironic would be Coincidental.
No.