15 Verbal Irony Examples
Dalia Yashinsky (MA, Phil)
Dalia Yashinsky is a freelance academic writer. She graduated with her Bachelor's (with Honors) from Queen's University in Kingston Ontario in 2015. She then got her Master's Degree in philosophy, also from Queen's University, in 2017.
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Verbal irony is a figure of speech where the literal words being used opposes the real meaning behind them.
In simple terms, verbal irony contradicts what is being said by the character or person speaking.
As a literary technique it, helps to add intrigue, drama and humour to storylines and characters, making the plot all the more engaging for audiences.
We can see instances of verbal irony in our daily lives too. For example, suppose you look outside and there is a terrible blizzard, then your friend looks outside and says, “Perfect day for the beach!” This is an example of verbal irony.
10 Simple Verbal Irony Examples
Consider these examples of verbal irony, so you can familiarize yourself with the term.
- The leader of an AA meeting says “I could use a drink right now.”
- A waiter working at a restaurant is being short with their customers. Someone comments on the waiter’s poor bedside manners, “Wow, this waiter has the best manners!”
- A weatherman saying “It’s not like I know about when it’s going to rain next.”
- A mother looks at her child’s messy bedroom: “I love how your room is always so clean!”
- A couple of teenagers see a “Do Not Enter” sign. One pipes up: “Let’s enter.”
- In a stressful situation, a girl says “Well this isn’t this just pleasant as ever.”
- When a girl’s mother is an hour late to lunch she says “I appreciate how you’re always on time mom!”
- After a bad accident a boy’s friends tells him “your car has never looked better!”
- A woman walks into a cold room with a broken heating system, she points at the nonfunctional heating system and states “Well it’s pretty warm in here, isn’t it?”
- A woman’s shoes get drenched in the rain and she says “I think the water just gave them a new fashionable touch!”
5 Verbal Irony Examples in Film and Literature
Quick Summary: Anna is being chased by a scary monster, which she refers to as a marshmallow.
Frozen , the popular animated Disney musical film and kids movie includes verbal irony.
At a point in the film, Elsa builds a scary snow man/monster to chase away her sister, Anna. Olaf, a friendly snowman, is being chased by the snow monster.
When he approaches Anna, he tells her that he is being chased by a “marshmallow”. His choice of words make it seem like the snow monster is a sweet, benevolent creature, even though it’s anything but that.
Verbal irony, in this case, helps introduce comedic relief to what might be an otherwise stressful situation for the characters in the movie.
2. The Beauty and the Beast
Quick Summary: Belle tells Gaston “I don’t deserve you” when Belle and the audience know she is a far better person than Gaston.
In Disney’s iconic film, The Beauty and the Beast , the character Gaston (who is vain, shallow, and thinks all women desire him) pursues Belle. We know that Belle is better than Gaston, but at a point in the film Belle tells Gaston, “I just don’t deserve you!” When, in fact, she deserves much more than what Gaston has to offer her.
Belle herself knows this, and so do we, the audience. The real meaning of her words conflicts with their literal meaning, making it a clear case of verbal irony.
3. Julius Caesar
Quick Summary: After Brutus betrays Cesar, Mark Antony calls him an honorable man. Everyone is aware that this is the exact opposite of the truth.
Verbal irony occurs in the play Julius Caeser by William Shakespeare. The character Mark Antony, when speaking about Brutus, describes him as an “honorable man”. This is verbally ironic since he makes this statement immediately after Brutus betrays Caesar. Clearly, Mark Antony considers Brutas anything but honorable.
Mark Antony’s literal words conflict with their meaning, or the intention he has in making that statement. This therefore is another clear example of verbal irony from Shakespeare’s Julius Caeser .
4. “Ironic” by Alanis Morrissette
Quick Summary: A man is in the middle of a plane crash and says “Well isn’t this nice.” Clearly, it isn’t!
The song responsible for driving all English teachers nuts, “Ironic” by Alanis Morrissette may confuse the meaning of irony on a broader level. Alanis understands Verbal irony, however.
See these lyrics, which are verbally ironic:
Mr. Play It Safe was afraid to fly He packed his suitcase and kissed his kids goodbye He waited his whole damn life to take that flight And as the plane crashed down, he thought “Well, isn’t this nice?”
The “Well, isn’t this nice?” is verbal irony. Clearly, a plane crashing is not nice at all!
5. Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove
Quick Summary: President Muffley tries to break up an argument in the war room by saying “You can’t fight here! This is a war room!” It’s ironic, because the room is named after fighting!
Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove is a dark comedy and satire from 1964, about the Cold War.
At a point in the film, a few of the high-ranking officers and army generals get into an argument.
The character, President Merkin Muffley, in an attempt to break up the argument, says to the other men, “Gentlemen, you can’t fight in here! This is the war room!”
You can’t fight in most places. That said, if there was a place where you would think you could fight: the war room would be it. This illustrates verbal irony again, since the words oppose their true, non-literal meaning.
Other Types of Irony
Situational irony.
Situational irony is when what is expected to happen in a given situation diametrically opposses what in fact happens.
Much of the premise of The Wizard of Oz is based on the concept of situational irony . We have a lion that is without courage (to find later he had it all along), Dorothy goes to the Wizard to find her way home, when she could have done so all along. The Tin Man is looking for a heart, and the Scarecrow wants a brain.
There are hints throughout the story that each of the characters already has what they wish to possess, making The Wizard of Oz perhaps one of the most verbally ironic films to date.
Dramatic Irony
Dramatic Irony occurs when the audience knows more about a situation than the characters do themselves.
Dramatic irony is a device used to keep the audience not only invested in the storyline, but it places the audience a step ahead of the characters, which adds further suspense and keeps the audience engrossed in the story.
We can see an example of dramatic irony in Shakespeare’s Macbeth . King Duncan places his full trust in Macbeth, and states “He was a gentleman in whom I built an absolute trust.” Though King Duncan is unaware, the audience is aware of the fact that Macbeth is actually the one that plans to kill Duncan, making this an instance of dramatic irony.
For more, see my 12 types of irony article.
Literary devices like verbal irony are used in various ways, and there are numerous examples in all types of media. Irony in all forms adds substance and nuance to stories, it brings humour to what may otherwise be bland scenes and/or character dialogue. It helps add suspense and creates tension in the story. Hopefully, now that you are apprised of the concept, you’ll be able to point it out when you see it.
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20 Irony Examples: In Literature and Real Life
By Millie Dinsdale
Irony occurs when what happens is the opposite from what is expected.
Writers use irony as a literary technique to add humor, create tension, include uncertainty, or form the central plot of a story.
We will be looking at the four types of irony (three common and one uncommon) and providing examples and tips to help you identify and use them in your work.
Quick Reminder of What Irony Is
Irony examples in literature, irony examples in real life, which scenario is an example of irony.
Irony is a rhetorical device in which the appearance of something is opposite to its reality .
There are four main types of irony: verbal irony, dramatic irony, situational irony, and Socratic irony . Socratic irony is not a literary device, and therefore we will not be looking at examples, but it is worth being aware of.
- Verbal Irony is when a speaker says one thing but means something entirely different. The literal meaning is at odds with the intended meaning.
- Dramatic Irony is when the audience knows something that the characters don’t.
- Situational Irony is when what happens is the opposite of what you expect.
- Socratic Irony is when a person feigns ignorance in order to get another to admit to knowing or doing something. It is named after Socrates, the Greek philosopher, who used this technique to tease information out of his students.
Why is irony important to understand? Along with being a key rhetorical device, irony can also be very effective when used correctly in writing.
To demonstrate this fact we have selected ten examples of irony usage from popular literature. Warning: this list includes a few spoilers.
1) The main characters’ wishes in L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz are a perfect example of situational irony .
The characters go on a quest to fulfill their hearts’ desires and instead of doing so they realize that they already had what they wanted all along. It is unexpected because the reader might assume that all of their desires will be gifted to the four main characters but, in the end, it’s unnecessary.
2) The conclusion between the two primary opponents in The Night Circus contains a large amount of situational irony .
The reader is led to expect that either Marco or Celia will win but, in the end, they both end up working together to keep their creation alive. The competition is not as black and white (pardon the pun) as it initially seems.
3) The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is full of verbal irony . A great example of this is when Dr Jekyll says “I am quite sure of him,” when referring to Mr Hyde.
This is verbal irony because the reader finds out that Hyde is actually Jekyll’s alter ego, so it would be expected that he knows himself well.
4) Shakespeare creates dramatic irony in the prologue of Romeo and Juliet through the line: “A pair of star-cross’d lovers take their life.”
This well-known example is ironic because the reader knows from the very beginning that their romance will end in death, but they don’t yet know how.
5) Alice’s changing relationship with the Bandersnatch in Alice in Wonderland is situationally ironic .
When we first meet the Bandersnatch, he is ferocious and attempts to harm Alice. When Alice returns his eye, they become friends and the two work together to defeat the Jabberwocky. The audience expects to see an enemy but are instead presented with an ally.
6) George Orwell masters situational irony in Animal Farm through the animals’ endless and fruitless battle to obtain freedom.
All of the animals work together to escape the tyranny of the humans who own them. In doing so they end up under the even stricter rule of the pigs.
7) Roald Dahl’s short story A Lamb to a Slaughter is full of dramatic irony .
A housewife kills her husband with a frozen leg of lamb when he asks for a divorce. The police come looking for evidence and unknowingly dispose of it when they are fed the murder weapon for dinner.
8) The repeated line “May the odds be ever in your favor” in Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games is verbally ironic .
Everyone from district 1 through 12 can be offered as a child sacrifice and has a 1/24 chance of surviving. Even if they do survive they are then delivered back under the control of the Capitol, so the odds are in nobody’s favor.
9) The disparity between children and adults in Roald Dahl’s Matilda is situationally ironic .
Most of the adults in Matilda’s life are hot-headed, uneducated, and unreasonable, while she as a six-year old is more mature than most of them. The traditional roles of child and adult are unexpectedly flipped on their heads.
10) The hit-and-run in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is situationally ironic .
Daisy Buchanan kills Myrtle when Myrtle runs in front of Gatsby’s car. It is ironic because Myrtle is Tom Buchanan’s mistress but Daisy does not know this. She unintentionally killed her husband's mistress.
Irony works so well in literature because it is so common in real life. Have you ever found yourself saying “well that’s ironic” to a situation in your life?
You could be talking about verbal, situational, or dramatic irony. Let’s take a look at a few everyday examples of each type.
11) When you find out that your pulmonologist (lung doctor) smokes.
This is situationally ironic because you’d expect this doctor of all people to avoid smoking because they understand all of the risks.
12) When someone falls over for the tenth time while ice-skating and says “I meant to do that.”
This person cannot be intending to fall over all the time but they are using verbal irony to make light of a possibly painful situation.
13) Your dog eats his certificate of dog-training obedience.
You would expect that in the process of having obtained an obedience certificate, the dog would also have learnt not to eat random objects. This is an example of situational irony .
14) The fire hydrant is on fire.
This is situationally ironic because the last thing that you would expect to be on fire is the object that is designed to fight fires. A similar example to this would be if a fire station were on fire.
15) A girl is teasing her friend for having mud on his face but she doesn’t know that she also has mud on her face.
From the point of view of the friend, this is an example of dramatic irony because he knows something that she does not.
16) Your mom buys a non-stick pan but has to throw it away because the label is so sticky she cannot get it off.
You would predict that the pan was completely non-stick but are proven wrong at the first hurdle, which is situationally ironic .
17) When someone crashes into a “thank you for driving carefully'' sign.
The vision of a car crashed into the sign makes it clear that they did not drive carefully at all, which is situationally ironic .
18) Buying your English teacher a mug that reads “your the best teacher ever.”
The poor English teacher may feel like they have failed in their job in this situationally ironic situation where their student has bought them a mug with a grammar mistake.
19) When a child says “I want crisps now!” and the parent says: “Thank you so much for using your good manners.”
The child is being impolite and the parent is not actually congratulating the child on their manners in this example of verbal irony . They mean the exact opposite.
20) You can’t open your new scissors because you don’t have any scissors to cut through the plastic.
This example of situational irony is far too common. In buying scissors, it can be expected that you do not have any, so it is ironic that the packaging is designed for someone who already has a pair.
Are you ready for a quick quiz to test your knowledge of irony? The test is split into the three types of irony.
Which of These Are Examples of Situational Irony?
1) A police station is robbed.
2) A child loses his rucksack after being told to take care not to lose it.
3) A person eats sweets while preaching about healthy eating
Only 1) and 3) are examples of situational irony. Sentence 2) is not a situational irony example because it could be expected that the child might lose the rucksack and that is why they were told to take care.
It would, however, be ironic if he subsequently lost his “Most Organized in 2nd Grade” certificate five minutes after being awarded it.
Which of These Are Examples of Verbal Irony?
1) Saying “The weather is lovely today” while it is hailing.
2) “Wow that perfume is so lovely, did you bathe in it?”
3) Saying “Thank you so much for your help” after someone has crushed your new glasses while helping to look for them.
Only example 1) is verbally ironic, the other two are sarcastic comments.
Verbal irony and sarcasm are often confused but there is one big difference between them: verbal irony is when what you say is the opposite of what you mean while sarcasm is specifically meant to embarrass or insult someone.
Which of These Are Examples of Dramatic Irony?
1) A small ship without life boats is stuck in a monumental storm in the middle of the Atlantic.
2) Three characters are killed and a fourth seems to be going the same way.
3) A girl walks down the same alley we have just seen a known murderer walk down.
Only option 3) is an example of dramatic irony because the audience knows that the murderer is down the alley but the girl does not.
Although the other two examples are undeniably dramatic, there is no inherent irony because the audience has no more knowledge about what will happen than those involved.
Why Should You Use Irony in Your Writing?
Irony can be an effective tool to make a reader stop and think about what has just happened.
It can also emphasize a central theme or idea by adding an unexpected twist to the events of the story.
What brilliant examples of irony in literature have we missed? Share your favorites in the comments.
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Definition and Examples of Irony (Figure of Speech)
Owaki / Kulla / Getty Images
- An Introduction to Punctuation
- Ph.D., Rhetoric and English, University of Georgia
- M.A., Modern English and American Literature, University of Leicester
- B.A., English, State University of New York
Irony is the use of words to convey the opposite of their literal meaning. Similarly, irony may be a statement or situation where the meaning is contradicted by the appearance or presentation of the idea.
Adjective: ironic or ironical . Also known as eironeia , illusio , and the dry mock .
The Three Kinds of Irony
Three kinds of irony are commonly recognized:
- Verbal irony is a trope in which the intended meaning of a statement differs from the meaning that the words appear to express.
- Situational irony involves an incongruity between what is expected or intended and what actually occurs.
- Dramatic irony is an effect produced by a narrative in which the audience knows more about the present or future circumstances than a character in the story.
In light of these different varieties of irony, Jonathan Tittler has concluded that irony
"has meant and means so many different things to different people that rarely is there a meeting of minds as to its particular sense on a given occasion."
(Quoted by Frank Stringfellow in The Meaning of Irony , 1994.)
From the Greek, "feigned ignorance"
Pronunciation:
Irony in academics.
Academicians and others have explained irony in its various forms, including how to use it and how others have used it, as these quotes show.
D.C. Muecke
"Irony may be used as a rhetorical device to enforce one's meaning. It may be used . . . as a satiric device to attack a point of view or to expose folly, hypocrisy, or vanity. It may be used as a heuristic device to lead one's readers to see that things are not so simple or certain as they seem, or perhaps not so complex or doubtful as they seem. It is probable that most irony is rhetorical, satirical, or heuristic. ... "In the first place irony is a double-layered or two-story phenomenon. ... In the second place, there is always some kind of opposition that may take the form of contradiction, incongruity, or incompatibility. ... In the third place, there is in irony an element of 'innocence.'" — The Compass of Irony . Methuen, 1969
R. Kent Rasmussen
"David Wilson, the title character of Pudd'nhead Wilson , is a master of irony. In fact, his use of irony permanently marks him. When he first arrives in Dawson's Landing in 1830, he makes an ironic remark that the villagers cannot understand. Distracted by the annoying yelping of an unseen dog, he says, 'I wished I owned half of that dog.' When asked why, he replies, 'Because I would kill my half.' He does not really want to own half the dog, and he probably does not really want to kill it; he merely wants to silence it and knows killing half the dog would kill the whole animal and achieve the desired effect. His remark is a simple example of irony, and the failure of the villagers to understand it causes them immediately to brand Wilson a fool and nickname him 'pudd'nhead.' The very title of the novel is, therefore, based on irony, and that irony is compounded by the fact that Wilson is anything but a fool." — Bloom's How to Write About Mark Twain . Infobase, 2008
Bryan Garner
"A classic example of irony is Mark Antony's speech in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar . Although Antony declares, 'I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him,' and declares that the assassins are 'honorable men,' he means just the opposite." — Garner's Modern American Usage . Oxford University Press, 2009
Barry Brummett
"It is sometimes said that we live in an age of irony. Irony in this sense may be found, for example, all throughout The Daily Show with Jon Stewart . Suppose you hear a political candidate give a terribly long speech, one that rambles on and on without end. Afterward, you might turn to a friend sitting next to you, roll your eyes, and say, 'Well, that was short and to the point, wasn't it?' You are being ironic. You are counting on your friend to turn the literal meaning of your expression, to read it as exactly the opposite of what your words actually mean. ... "When irony works, it helps to cement social bonds and mutual understanding because the speaker and hearer of irony both know to turn the utterance, and they know that the other one knows they will turn the utterance. ... "Irony is a kind of winking at each other, as we all understand the game of meaning reversal that is being played." — Techniques of Close Reading . Sage, 2010
"Irony has always been a primary tool the under-powered use to tear at the over-powered in our culture. But now irony has become the bait that media corporations use to appeal to educated consumers. ... It's almost an ultimate irony that those who say they don't like TV will sit and watch TV as long as the hosts of their favorite shows act like they don't like TV, either. Somewhere in this swirl of droll poses and pseudo-insights, irony itself becomes a kind of mass therapy for a politically confused culture. It offers a comfortable space where complicity doesn't feel like complicity. It makes you feel like you are counter-cultural while never requiring you to leave the mainstream culture it has so much fun teasing. We are happy enough with this therapy that we feel no need to enact social change." — Review of The Daily Show , 2001
Jon Winokur
"Alanis Morissette's 'Ironic,' in which situations purporting to be ironic are merely sad, random, or annoying (a traffic jam when you're late, a no-smoking sign on your cigarette break) perpetuates widespread misuse of the word and outrages irony prescriptivists . It is, of course, ironic that 'Ironic' is an unironic song about irony. Bonus irony: 'Ironic' is widely cited as an example of how Americans don't get irony, despite the fact that Alanis Morissette is Canadian." — The Big Book of Irony . St. Martin's, 2007
R. Jay Magill, Jr.
"Direct expression, with no tricks, gimmickry, or irony, has come to be interpreted ironically because the default interpretive apparatus says, 'He can't really mean THAT!' When a culture becomes ironic about itself en masse , simple statements of brutal fact, simple judgments of hate or dislike become humorous because they unveil the absurdity, 'friendliness,' and caution of normal public expression. It's funny because it's true. Honestly. We're all upside down now." — Chic Ironic Bitterness . University of Michigan Press, 2007
Irony in Popular Cultue
Irony also has a large presence in popular culture—books, movies, and television shows. These quotes show the concept in use in a variety of formats.
John Hall Wheelock
"A planet doesn't explode of itself," said drily The Martian astronomer, gazing off into the air— "That they were able to do it is proof that highly Intelligent beings must have been living there." — "Earth"
Raymond Huntley and Eliot Makeham
Kampenfeldt: This is a grave matter, a very grave matter. It has just been reported to me that you've been expressing sentiments hostile to the Fatherland. Schwab: What, me sir? Kampenfeldt: I warn you, Schwab, such treasonable conduct will lead you to a concentration camp. Schwab: But sir, what did I say? Kampenfeldt: You were distinctly heard to remark, "This is a fine country to live in." Schwab: Oh, no, sir. There's some mistake. No, what I said was, "This is a fine country to live in." Kampenfeldt: Huh? You sure? Schwab: Yes sir. Kampenfeldt: I see. Well, in future don't make remarks that can be taken two ways. — Night Train to Munich , 1940
Peter Sellers
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room." — As President Merkin Muffley in Dr. Strangelove, 1964
William Zinsser
"It is a fitting irony that under Richard Nixon, launder became a dirty word."
Alan Bennett
"We're conceived in irony. We float in it from the womb. It's the amniotic fluid. It's the silver sea. It's the waters at their priest-like task, washing away guilt and purpose and responsibility. Joking but not joking. Caring but not caring. Serious but not serious." — Hilary in The Old Country , 1977
Thomas Carlyle
"An ironic man, with his sly stillness, and ambuscading ways, more especially an ironic young man, from whom it is least expected, may be viewed as a pest to society." Sartor Resartus: The Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdrockh , 1833-34
"Glee"
Rachel Berry: Mr. Schuester, do you have any idea how ridiculous it is to give the lead solo in "Sit Down, You're Rocking the Boat" to a boy in a wheelchair? Artie Abrams: I think Mr. Schue is using irony to enhance the performance. Rachel Berry: There's nothing ironic about show choir! — Pilot episode, 2009
"Seinfeld"
Woman: I started riding these trains in the '40s. Those days a man would give up his seat for a woman. Now we're liberated and we have to stand. Elaine: It's ironic. Woman: What's ironic? Elaine: This, that we've come all this way, we have made all this progress, but you know we've lost the little things, the niceties. Woman: No, I mean what does ironic mean? Elaine: Oh. — "The Subway," Jan. 8 1992
Sideshow Bob
"I'm aware of the irony of appearing on TV in order to decry it." — The Simpsons
Calvin Trillin
"Math was my worst subject because I could never persuade the teacher that my answers were meant ironically."
The Men Who Stare at Goats,
Lyn Cassady: It's okay, you can "attack" me. Bob Wilton: What's with the quotation fingers? It's like saying I'm only capable of ironic attacking or something. — 2009
Irony Deficiency
Irony deficiency is an informal term for the inability to recognize, comprehend, and/or utilize irony—that is, a tendency to interpret figurative language in a literal way.
Jonah Goldberg
"Mobsters are reputedly huge fans of The Godfather . They don’t see it as a tale of individual moral corruption. They see it as a nostalgia trip to better days for the mob." — "The Irony of Irony." National Review , April 28, 1999
"Irony deficiency is directly proportional to the strength of the political commitment or religious fervor. True believers of all persuasions are irony deficient. ... "Brutal dictators are irony deficient—take Hitler, Stalin, Kim Jong-il, and Saddam Hussein, a world-class vulgarian whose art collection consisted of kitsch paintings displayed unironically." — The Big Book of Irony . Macmillan, 2007
Swami Beyondananda
"Here is something ironic: We live at a time when our diets are richer in irony than ever before in human history, yet millions of us suffer from that silent crippler, irony deficiency ... not so much a deficiency in irony itself, but an inability to utilize the abundance of irony all around us." — Duck Soup for the Soul . Hysteria, 1999
Roy Blount, Jr.
"Will people who detect a lack of irony in other cultures never stop to consider that this may be a sign of their own irony deficiency? Maybe it's defensible when the apes detect a lack of irony in Charlton Heston in Planet of the Apes , but not when, say, Brits detect it in, say, Americans as a race . ... The point of irony, after all, is to say things behind people's backs to their faces. If you look around the poker table and can't tell who the pigeon is, it's you." — "How to Talk Southern." The New York Times , Nov. 21, 2004
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