Irony and its types
Meaning in Language
Communicati-on and Identity
Brainrot(Dr. Dewing)
100

The third planet from the sun

What is Earth?

100

The unique way an author writes, influenced by their word choices and sentence structure.

Style

100

A story in which characters and events symbolize broader messages, often moral or political.


Allegory

100

“Rizz” is what the internet’s calling this intangible quality, also known as extreme smoothness or sauce.

Charisma 

200

When the opposite of what is expected occurs in a situation.

Situational Irony

200

The literal or dictionary meaning of a word, without added emotion or ideas.

Denotation

200

A specific form of language spoken by a group or region, with distinct vocabulary and pronunciation.

Dialect

200

When someone isn't ugly but also isn't attractive

Mid

300

When someone says the opposite of what they mean, typically sarcastic.

Verbal Irony

300

The choice of words and phrases in writing, which sets tone and style.

Diction

300

An object, character, or action that represents a deeper meaning.

Symbol

300

Erm wha the...

sigma

400

When the audience knows something the characters don’t, creating tension.

Dramatic Irony

400

The attitude or feeling expressed in writing, such as humor or seriousness.

Tone

400

The character or image someone presents to the world, which may not fully reflect their true self.

Persona

400

Famous Cosco Cookie

The Double-Chunk Chocolate Cookie

500

 A contrast between expectation and reality, often humorous or insightful.

Irony

500

The emotional or cultural meanings that words carry in addition to their literal definition.

Connotation

500

The central idea or message of a story, typically about life or human nature.

Theme

500

Who is our sunshine?

The Goat LeBonBon James

M
e
n
u