The author's attitude towards the writing, characters, and situation can vary depending on the tone of the text. It could be serious, humorous, satirical, critical, or any other emotion. The author's attitude towards readers may be to engage, educate, provoke thought, entertain, or challenge them.
Tone is the attitude that the narrator gives off. Some examples are: sarcastic, serious, ironic, objective, and humorous.
The attitude of the author toward the subject matter and characters is referred to as tone. It can be formal, informal, humorous, sarcastic, or emotional, among other possibilities. Tone helps convey the author's perspective and sets the overall mood of the writing.
sarcastic and darkly humorous
Some humorous passages in "The Great Gatsby" include the comical banter between characters at Gatsby's extravagant parties, the awkward encounters between Daisy and Gatsby at Nick's cottage, and the sarcastic descriptions of the shallow and materialistic society portrayed in the novel.
The humorous or mildly sarcastic use of words to imply the opposite of what they normally mean
tone is one of those things that has slightly different meanings to different people so you are likely to get a range of answers to this question.Tone can refer to the narrators 'tone of voice', that is is the narrator being: friendly, kind, condescending, brusque, sarcastic, lying, deceptive, ingeniousness.The style or distinction of the novel.
Sarcastic is when you say something but really you mean the opposite but usually in a humorous way. Like if someone stated the obvious and you said "wow how did you come up with that?" That would be sarcastic.
Indeed ia am a "butterfly chaser,googly eyed bleeding heart and wild conservative."
All of the above except sarcastic. From the point of view of Quince, Bottom, Flute etc. it was serious: they were the Ed Woods of Athens. From the point of view of the onstage audience of Theseus, Hippolyta, Lysander et al it was humorous, "the silliest stuff I ever saw." From the point of view of Shakespeare and the actual audience it has a satiric aspect, since viewed from the outside it makes fun of amateur theatricals and inept actors. Although Demetrius especially has sarcastic remarks to make about the play and the actors, nobody would suggest that the play or performance was in any way sarcastic.
Sarcastic usually means a biting humorous statement. It is most often mildly embarrassing to the recipient. Such expletives as "duh" or "doh" are short quick sarcastic comments. The art of sarcasm is usually practiced by comedians, and is directed outward toward the audience rather than inward at oneself."'ya think?' was Zoe's sarcastic comment to Mary when she stated the obvious."Sarcasm is often considered to be the lowest form of wit.
Sarcastic usually means a biting humorous statement. It is most often mildly embarrassing to the recipient. Such expletives as "duh" or "doh" are short quick sarcastic comments. The art of sarcasm is usually practiced by comedians, and is directed outward toward the audience rather than inward at oneself."'ya think?' was Zoe's sarcastic comment to Mary when she stated the obvious."Sarcasm is often considered to be the lowest form of wit.
Including exaggerated characters