释义 |
irony I. irony \ˈī(ə)rnē, ˈīənē, -ni\ adjective Etymology: Middle English yrony, from yron, iren iron + -y — more at iron 1. : made or consisting of iron : containing or abounding in iron < irony sands > < irony chains > 2. : resembling iron in some quality (as taste or hardness) < an irony flavor > II. iro·ny \ˈīrənē, -ni sometimes ˈīərn-\ noun (-es) Etymology: Latin ironia, from Greek eirōneia, from eirōn dissembler (perhaps from eirein to say) + -eia -y — more at word 1. a. : feigned ignorance designed to confound or provoke an antagonist : dissimulation — compare socratic irony b. : dramatic irony 2. a. : humor, ridicule, or light sarcasm that adopts a mode of speech the intended implication of which is the opposite of the literal sense of the words (as when expressions of praise are used where blame is meant) b. : this mode of expression as a literary style or form < a gift for irony > c. : an ironic utterance or expression 3. : a state of affairs or events that is the reverse of what was or was to be expected : a result opposite to and as if in mockery of the appropriate result < the irony of fate > Synonyms: see wit |