Irony definition

Irony is when someone means the exact opposite of what is said.

Examples of Irony in a sentence

  • Illuminar, LLC Indieproduction, LLC Irony West Corp Island Film Studios, LLC It's Possible Productions, LLC ▇.▇.

  • Irony and Misreading in the Annals of Tacitus, Cambridge & New York, Cambridge University Press.

  • Indieproduction, LLC Irony West Corp Island Film Studios, LLC It’s Possible Productions, LLC ▇.▇.

  • Liberalisation or Liberation?: Economic Reform, Spatial Poverty, and the Irony of Conflict in Ghana’s Northern Region.

  • In Kierkegaard’s conclusion to The Concept of Irony, titled “Irony as a Controlled Element” or “Mastered Moment”90 [behersket Moment], he presses the question of whether such an ethico-religious use of irony could ever truly be infinite.

  • Kierkegaard’s basic explanation in The Concept of Irony of what prevents Socrates from succumbing to such a positivity is the following: “What kept Socrates from a speculative absorption in the remotely intimated positivity behind this ignorance was, of course, the divine call that he had to convince every individual of the same thing.”83 For Kierkegaard’s Socrates, the work of infinite negation was a divinely ordained calling.

  • This leads to literary historiography being “presented as a continuous fight between […] generations focused on innovation”.26 The same tendency is pointed out specifically with regard to the work of the obituarists of postmodernism and criticized by ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇, ▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and 24 ▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇, “The Changing Face of Post-Postmodern Fiction: Irony, Sincerity, and Populism.” Critique - 2022.

  • Thus on A’s interpretation, “the play does not end.”181 As he explains, “When the spectator thinks the play is over and that he has secured a good foothold, he suddenly discovers that what he is stepping on is not something firm but, so to speak, the end of a see-saw, and as he steps upon it he tilts the whole play up and over himself.”182 A’s infinitization of the irony in The First Love recalls Kierkegaard’s analysis of Tieck’s plays in The Concept of Irony.

  • As A acknowledges, he does not interpret the play “as it probably is generally understood.”176 According to his idiosyncratic analysis, what makes the play a masterpiece is that it is “infinitely comic,” rather than “finitely moralizing.”177 His central thesis is that the play has no moralistic lesson to teach the spectator, but that its irony, like the irony of Socrates in The Concept of Irony, is all-consuming.

  • Truth and Untruth in ▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇’▇ On the Concept of Irony (Copenhagen: C.