Irony Basics
Types of Irony
Oxymorons and Figures
Dramatic Elements
Literary Purpose
100

Define "irony" in one clear sentence as it applies to literature.

Irony: a contrast between expectation and reality in meaning, situation, or expression.

100

Name the three main types of literary irony.

 Dramatic, situational, verbal.

100

Define "oxymoron" and give one two-word example.

Oxymoron: two-word phrase combining contradictory terms. Example: "bittersweet.

100

Give a description of stage directions

written instructions in a play script—often italicized or bracketed—that guide actors and directors on movement, positioning, and delivery, as well as setting the scene's mood, lighting, and sound

100

State one purpose authors use irony for (one short sentence)

To create surprise, emphasize theme, or reveal character.

200

Give a short example (one sentence) of situational irony that could happen at school

Example: "The absent-minded principal forgot to bring the permission slips to school.

200

Which type of irony occurs when the reader knows something a character does not?

Dramatic irony.

200

Identify the figure of speech: "Deafening silence." Is it an oxymoron, simile, or allusion?

Oxymoron

200

What are the three types of single character speeches delivered in a drama?

Monologue, Soliloquy, Aside

200

Explain in one sentence how oxymorons can affect the tone of a passage.

Oxymorons can create a tone that's ironic, bittersweet, or conflicted.

300

Explain how verbal irony and sarcasm are connected in one or two sentences.

Verbal irony: saying the opposite of what one means for effect; sarcasm: biting or mocking verbal irony intended to hurt or criticize

300

Provide a one-sentence example of dramatic irony from a play or movie scenario (not an existing title; original example).

Example: "The hero hides in plain sight while the villain searches everywhere else."

300

Provide a definition or example of an allusion

An allusion is a reference to a well-known person, place, historical event, or piece of literature. Its purpose is to help readers connect ideas.


Example: The strong man was a Sampson of his time.

300

What is the difference between a soliloquy and an aside?

A soliloquy is longer and delivered when a character is alone (or appears to be alone) so the audience hears an extended internal reflection; an aside is short and usually directed to the audience during a scene with others presen

300

Describe how irony can develop character (2 sentences)

 Irony can expose contradictions in a character’s actions versus beliefs, revealing complexity or flaws

400

Identify whether the following is irony and name the type: "A firefighter's house burned down while he was rescuing neighbors."

Yes — situational irony (firefighter expected to protect from fire; his own house burns).

400

How does dramatic irony differ from situational irony? Give a short definition or a one-sentence example

Dramatic irony is when we know something the character doesn't expect to occur; situational is an unexpected outcome  Example: situational — a sailor drowns in a flood while praising how safe land is.

400

Explain how an oxymoron can reveal complex emotion in a character (2 sentences).

Oxymorons condense conflicting feelings into a compact phrase, revealing complexity or inner conflict in a character.

400

Describe the difference between dialogue and a monologue

Dialogue is the speech between characters.

A monologue is a long speech by one character addressed to other characters or to the audience that can reveal feelings, tell a story, or persuade

400

Show how an author’s choice to use dramatic irony might help build suspense across chapters (2–3 sentences)

Dramatic irony makes readers anticipate consequences the characters cannot see, increasing suspense across chapters

500

Provide a brief explanation of how irony can create surprise or tension in a story (2–3 sentences).

 Irony creates contrast between what is expected and what occurs, producing surprise, tension, or highlighting a theme by undermining assumptions.

500

Analyze how situational, verbal, and dramatic irony could work together in a single scene (2–3 sentences).

Situational irony subverts expected events; verbal irony turns dialogue against meaning; dramatic irony lets readers see consequences characters miss — together they can deepen theme and reader engagement.

500

 When a person refers to the Garden of Eden, which is a well known story from the Bible, this is an example of a simile, allusion, or metaphor.

Allusion
500

Read this short soliloquy prompt and identify the speaker’s central conflict and one line that shows it: “To stay or go? My heart says one thing, my duty another. If I leave, who will suffer? If I stay, who will I betray?”

Central conflict: whether to follow personal desire or duty (stay vs. go). Line showing it: “If I leave, who will suffer? If I stay, who will I betray?” — this line explicitly shows the speaker torn between consequences for others and loyalty.

500

How does an aside affect the audience’s understanding of a character’s intentions? Provide one specific effect.

An aside can reveal a character’s hidden motives, creating dramatic contrast between what the audience knows and what other characters believe; this can make the character seem more sympathetic or more deceptive depending on the content