Irony Quiz 1 explores various forms of irony through multiple-choice questions. It assesses understanding of situational, dramatic, and verbal irony, enhancing critical thinking and interpretation skills relevant to real-life and literary scenarios.
Verbal irony
Verbal and situational irony
Verbal and dramatic irony
Situational and dramatic irony
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Verbal irony
Situational irony
Dramatic irony
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A left handed person is called "Lefty"
A tall person is called "Shorty
An arrogant criminal gets caught.
A best selling writer's latest novel is a flop.
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Situational irony
Dramatic irony
Verbal irony
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Verbal irony
Dramatic irony
Situational irony
No irony
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True
False
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Situational, because we know that Paul is in no position to judge his teacher, but he remains unaware of this.
Verbal, because he says that she has every right to be there, but he thinks the opposite.
Dramatic, because he feels her not good enough to be there, but we know that he is in the same position.
Non-ironic
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Situational irony
Verbal irony
Dramatic irony
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A basketball fan remarks, "Watching Michael Jordan play ball knocks my socks off!"
A soccer fan remarks, "That goalie is in way over his head."
A football fan remarks, "That receiver's face was as white as a ghost, as the ball whizzed past his hands."
A baseball fan remarks, "I just love lots of homework on opening night of the World Series!"
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