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What is irony?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.5
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1.5.110 cards
What is irony?
When the real meaning is the opposite of the plain words, or an outcome is the reverse of what's expected.
What is a paradox?
A statement that seems to contradict itself but reveals a truth.
Give an example of irony.
A fire station that burns down — the outcome is the reverse of what you'd expect.
Give an example of a paradox.
‘The more you have, the less you feel.’
How do you tell them apart?
Irony = opposite meaning; paradox = one line that contradicts itself but is true.
Why do writers use irony?
To say a second thing under the words — often to criticise without saying it straight.
Why do writers use paradox?
To make you stop, then see a surprising truth.
How do you analyse irony?
Name it, then say the opposite truth the words hide.
What is situational irony?
When the outcome is the reverse of what you'd expect.
Commonest mistake with irony?
Saying ‘this is ironic’ without explaining the opposite meaning.
1.5.210 cards
What is hyperbole?
Deliberate exaggeration, far past the literal truth, for effect.
What is understatement?
Deliberately playing something down so it sounds smaller than it is.
Give an example of hyperbole.
‘I've told you a million times.’
Give an example of understatement.
Calling a deep cut ‘just a scratch’.
How do you tell them apart?
Hyperbole makes something bigger; understatement makes it smaller.
Why do writers use hyperbole?
To make a feeling land hard — stress, awe, frustration.
Why do writers use understatement?
A huge thing made small can hit harder, or sound calm and controlled.
Is hyperbole meant literally?
No — the gap from the truth is the point.
How do you analyse understatement?
Name it, then the gap between the small words and the real size.
Commonest mistake here?
Taking the exaggeration as fact instead of an effect.
1.5.310 cards
What is an allusion?
A passing reference to another text, person or event the reader is expected to recognise.
What is an allegory?
A whole story that stands for a bigger idea, where the parts map onto something real.
Give an example of an allusion.
Calling a hard journey ‘an odyssey’ — a nod to the old Greek voyage.
Give an example of an allegory.
A story about animals taking over a farm that really means a revolution.
How do you tell them apart?
An allusion is a small nod inside the text; an allegory is the whole story standing for something.
Why do writers use allusion?
To borrow a lot of meaning in one word or phrase.
Why do writers use allegory?
To make a big or risky idea easier to see through a simple story.
How do you analyse an allusion?
Name what it refers to and the meaning it brings in.
How do you analyse an allegory?
Name the bigger idea and match parts of the story to it.
Commonest mistake here?
Spotting an allusion but not saying what meaning it borrows.
1.5.410 cards
What is foreshadowing?
A small early hint that quietly warns the reader of what's coming later.
Give an example of foreshadowing.
A mention of ‘the loose stair’ pages before someone falls.
What is a planted detail?
A small object or fact dropped in early that seems minor but matters later.
How can mood foreshadow?
A heavy or dark mood quietly warns the reader that trouble is coming.
How do you analyse foreshadowing?
Name the hint AND the later event it sets up.
Why do writers foreshadow?
To build tension and make a later event feel prepared, not random.
Can a happy line foreshadow bad things?
Yes — ‘nothing could go wrong’ often warns the opposite.
When do you often notice foreshadowing?
At the payoff — you feel it once the later event arrives.
Foreshadowing vs a random detail?
Foreshadowing pays off later; a random detail leads nowhere.
Commonest mistake here?
Calling every early detail foreshadowing without naming its payoff.
Topic 1.5 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Irony & meaning
English A Lang & Lit exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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