Usa "irony" in una frase
irony frasi di esempio
irony
1. Climbing the Acropolis and visiting The Parthenon has been an ambition ever since I was at school and now the irony; that with the opportunity so close, I'm too tired
2. The irony of it is that this excitement is, by and large, non-existent
3. “Oh,” Tom said, with faint irony, “Glad to hear that you’ve been
4. wasn’t the slightest hint of irony or even disapproval in
5. ’ There was a touch of irony to her words, but
6. ’ The irony was that they
7. Jean, smiling at the irony
8. smiled at the irony, recalling his experience at the Pass of
9. the reader to apprehend the irony
10. Yet this prophet did not consider the irony of his youth About to contemplate the immaturity of his elders: 4t: The Zen Ship Splits into Reality
11. Conviction or proof? Irony of the repressed actuality of the
12. There was an irony here, as Monk-Key 1 saw Itself as more humane and self-conscious then the humans It viewed in the mass media—and was very curious about The lives it would intervene with in the future
13. “Did you hear any flaws?” he asked, without a speck of irony
14. A career thief’s detachment may have spared him of any associated guilt, but the irony certainly was not lost on him as he rented and relaxed in a room in an inn that his Guild had very recently struck
15. The irony had not been lost on DRAFT
16. And that’s what makes the irony infinitely sweeter
17. Thinking of what he had been up to less than a week before, Sebastian chuckled at the irony
18. One more thing, as I was talking away just now, I realized that the irony is what you have done may be a blessing in disguise for Atlantica,” she said to Kurt
19. We always seem to need him, don"t we?” The irony in this young man"s voice astounded me
20. irony for this - a lecture on morality from a
21. He couldn’t help but smile at the irony, though, that he, an anti-Phoenix protestor, had ended up in Salverford
22. The irony was apparent
23. ‘I don't question the wisdom of Central Council,’ she said with loosely concealed irony
24. ” They all laughed at their brush with death and the final irony of giving away all the power
25. Such (thoughtless) attitudes are (especially) apparent among certain segments of our Youth who have grown indifferent, if not impervious, altogether, to nuance, irony and wit or subtle designs or delicate shadings that (otherwise) require a receptive imagination rather than taking ―everything‖ at their face value, (as many of them seem to do); conditioned as their minds often are by the requirements of material ―evidence‖ and visual ―proofs‖; neither able to draw inferences nor reach (meaningful) conclusions from underlying sources, opting, instead, for the path of least (perceptual) resistance
26. The irony is that American presidents often more strongly opposed slavery at the start of US history, when much of the US public did not yet, and were more likely to be defenders of slavery as the time came close to it being abolished
27. Nevertheless, it is not without irony that from the smoldering ashes of defeat emerged off-centered platforms that would quickly come to define both party‘s sociopolitical ideologies in the coming years
28. With more than a little irony, Calley was invited as a guest of the Kiwanis Club of Columbus, Georgia, a charity known for its worldwide endeavors for justice and children's welfare
29. It is not without irony that I find myself (partially) agreeing in part with an African American sociologist, who recently suggested that Sports have superseded the Plantation
30. The greater irony was/is the failure of otherwise clear-thinking individuals to recognize that such spending, on a number of levels, was/is oftentimes a break-even proposition with no clear-cut winners however a high number of discernable losers
31. “All that in the thirty days before the end of Winter Break?” he asked, his voice steeped in irony
32. “I was way up the shaft,” said Nadir, unconscious of the irony
33. Dave appeared to be amused himself, with the irony of being in the middle of all that
34. “How was it?” he asked in unconscious irony
35. “Very good today,” he muttered in irony
36. I smiled at the irony
37. It's a funny irony, you want to teach about inclusion but you don't want to at the same time!
38. His embarrassing near-blunder at last night’s festivities at the announcement of the Last Holy Campaign as it was officially now named, had not gone unnoticed: it had become the subject of sarcastic comments and irony even at the lower echelons of the Ministry and the Army, but had only naturally been ignored by the Procrastinators in whole
39. Nevertheless, it was over: the war had been consigned to the history books and the dreams of a better Nicaragua, which apparently both he and his cousin had been fighting for, reduced to sad irony
40. The irony now was that with Amonas missing, and her protector unable to come to her aid she would have to fend for herself
41. I couldn’t be happier: the problem’s solving itself and don’t you love the irony of it? Look at the article on page three where they label me ‘the people’s anti-drug hero’
42. There is a strange irony in the fact that an avowedly Christian website titled “Christians Together” (an oxymoron?) over a period of months published a number of scathing and sometimes even poisonous comments about the Church of Scotland, mainly by members of other traditions or by discontents who have left the Kirk and want to claim a monopoly of the high moral, spiritual and Biblical ground for themselves
43. “Yes master,” she said, “have we pleased you?” Her tone was heavy with irony, but not anger
44. The driver nodded his silent agreement, while Ludwig said with the slightest hint of irony:
45. Rivulets of rain ran freely down Ethan’s taut face when he said with the slightest hint of irony:
46. He perceived the irony, but did not comment it
47. The unfamiliarity of this role reversal was overwhelming in its irony
48. “Listen, father,” said Ethan with a grin of irony before he added, “I couldn’t care less
49. Ethan asked with a hint of irony, still clutching the rifle in his hands:
50. In a twist of irony, these “Lambs of Christ” saved the Colosseum from complete ruin when “Pope Benedict XIV AD 1740–58 stopped (any further) spoliation by consecrating the Colosseum to the Passion of Christ, in commemoration of the martyrs’ blood shed there