Associations to the word «Ironic»
Noun
- Dialogue
- Toast
- Depiction
- Slogan
- Cheer
- Twain
- Protagonist
- Faint
- Slang
- Symbolism
- Imagery
- Tragedy
- Self
- Deference
- Ebert
- Phrase
- Ulysses
- Genre
- Sincerity
- Poem
- Remark
- Intellectual
- Whore
- Precision
- Attitude
- Spock
- Opposite
- Laugh
- Insight
- Gesture
- Listener
- Sticker
- Statement
- Epithet
- Tiny
- Politeness
- Stanza
- Odo
- Situation
- Gregor
- Terran
- Meredith
- Sense
- Socrates
- Contrast
- Style
- Comedy
- Reader
- Techno
- Title
- Glance
- Novel
- Acronym
- Quote
- Brow
- Essay
- Pill
- Tale
- Tilt
Adjective
Wiktionary
IRONIC, adjective. Characterized by or constituting (any kind of) irony.
IRONIC, adjective. Given to the use of irony; sarcastic.
IRONIC COOL, noun. The status of a genre, or celebrity associated with a genre, that has gone out of fashion for long enough to have been adopted, usually by a younger audience, as fashionable again; to be ironic. The genre or celebrity adopted has to be at odds both with current fashions for that age group and attempting non-conformity.
IRONIC ERROR, noun. Used other than as an idiom: see ironic, error.
IRONIC ERROR, noun. A blunder that occurs as the result of a strenuous effort to avoid it, such as spilling a drink because one is concentrating on not doing so.
IRONIC ERRORS, noun. Plural of ironic error
Dictionary definition
IRONIC, adjective. Humorously sarcastic or mocking; "dry humor"; "an ironic remark often conveys an intended meaning obliquely"; "an ironic novel"; "an ironical smile"; "with a wry Scottish wit".
IRONIC, adjective. Characterized by often poignant difference or incongruity between what is expected and what actually is; "madness, an ironic fate for such a clear thinker"; "it was ironical that the well-planned scheme failed so completely".
Wise words
All our words are but crumbs that fall down from the feast
of the mind.