There's some muddle here ... Please see the related question.
it was not ironic, it was a method of getting the Jews to do the 'dirty work'.
The United States were fighting patriotic revolutionaries, who were fighting for Vietnamese independence. The United States was founded by patriotic revolutionaries, who fought for American independence.
They are always fighting each other.
it was about slave owners fighting for political freedom?
Well, correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems to me that it would be ironic that this traitor would sail on a ship that is named after a bird that is disgusting and a scavenger, it shows how low this once great hero dropped to.
Roman CatholicEdit: How ironic since his mother was Jewish and his father was Islam.
Although the Elves and Dwarfs hate each other, they are fighting for the same "side".
It's not possible to answer this question without knowing more information about the context. There is nothing inherently ironic about having a conversation with your father in ordinary circumstances. Irony is a difference between intended meaning and reality - like when you say "this weather is great" when it is really terrible. An example of when it might be ironic to have a conversation with your father is if one of you was promising not to talk to the other - but you were talking about it. This would be ironic. Another example would be if you were trying to get your father not to do something for you by having the conversation, but the result of the conversation was that he did what you did not want him to do. That would be an ironic result.
Because he is a greedy B*****d and wanted presents
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.
No (that was ironic).
It was ironic because the colonists were fighting for their freedom from British rule based on principles of liberty and equality, yet many of them owned slaves who were not afforded these same rights. This contradiction highlighted the hypocrisy in the colonists' fight for freedom while denying it to others.